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Tag Archives: Natural gas

To listen to some of their ads you wouldn’t know that the promises lobbyists for oil, coal and natural gas are making about being energy independent are based on wishful thinking , deluding the American public that stalls our need to convert to clean renewable energy now.

Does this lovely lady look familiar?  She should.  You may have seen her warm and smiling countenance on a previous post of mine here.    It is more likely however that you have seen her more recently as the face of the pro-fossil fuel website, EnergyTomorrow.org, on TV ads sponsored by their lobbyist, the American Petroleum Institute(API).  These ads promote misleading information giving the public a half-baked view about the abundant energy below our surfaces to make America energy independent again.  Something we haven’t been since the 1950’s

Her name is Brooke Alexander, a former soap opera star, beauty queen and a former FOX correspondent.  Her new gig encourages viewers to “learn more” about how “we can secure our energy future”   Supposedly we have enough untapped oil & gas resources “to power 60 million cars and heat 160 million households for 60 years” Ms Alexander assures us in her ad here.

But learning more at the EnergyTomorrow website is like getting the news from FOX.  It’s all heavily slanted with circumspective data and substantial omissions.  And it doesn’t hurt when a smart, pretty woman is making the pitch for the likes of Exxon-Mobil, Conoco and Chevron.

Technically Ms. Alexander’s comments are correct but here’s what’s missing in her message:

In the oil & gas industry, resource means the amount of gas or oil that remains underground, and reserve means what could be produced from the resource.

Only a portion of the resources could be recovered technically.

Only a portion of the technically recoverable resources could be produced economically.

Only a portion of the economically producible resources could be produced into supply. That is called reserve.    SOURCE 

Much of the oil resources in North America touted in these ads are expected to come from the tar sand pits out of Canada.  The oil from these tar sands takes enormous amounts of energy to convert into liquid gas adding that much more CO2 into the atmosphere, warming the planet even further.  The ads also conceal the fact that any oil or gas we bring up from below the surface is not ours entirely.  All oil and gas are part of a global market.  Nor will its close proximity to us, like in Canada, mean cheaper gas.  The price of oil is set on world markets.

Within the United States, foreign companies are acquiring stakes in oil resources that can now be extracted with fracking, but regardless of where the oil is produced and who produces it, the price of oil is set on the global market. Such globalization means that widespread drilling and fracking for oil in the United States will do nothing for American consumers who are paying the high price of oil.    SOURCE 

So what “portion” of that oil and gas is actually capable of being converted into real sources of energy for consumers?   Well, according to Bill Powers, author of the upcoming book,  “Cold, Hungry and in the Dark: Exploding the Natural Gas Supply Myth”, there may be only 5-7 years of shale gas resources after the realities of extraction and production confront the industry.

My thesis is that the importance of shale gas has been grossly overstated; the U.S. has nowhere close to a 100-year supply. This myth has been perpetuated by self-interested industry, media and politicians. Their mantra is that exploiting shale gas resources will promote untold economic growth, new jobs and lead us toward energy independence.

In the book, I take a very hard look at the facts. And I conclude that the U.S. has between a five- to seven-year supply of shale gas, and not 100 years. That is far lower than the rosy estimates put out by the U.S. Energy Information Administration and others. In the real world, many companies are taking write-downs of their reserves.   SOURCE    

Powers is the editor of Powers Energy Investor and according to his website  has “devoted the last 15 years to studying and analyzing various aspects of the energy sector”.

Another expert in the field is Arthur Berman.  Berman is a petroleum geologist, Associate Editor of the American Association of Petroleum Geolgists Bulletin and Director of the Association for the Study of Peak Oil. He maintains the blog Petroleum Truth Report.   Berman tells us that the declining rates of shale gas validates Powers’ assessment about severely limited supplies.

“I’ve looked at this”, he tells James Staffiord with OilPrice.com.  “In the Eagleford shale, which is supposed to be the mother of all shale oil plays, the annual decline rate is higher than 42%”.  They’re going to have to drill hundreds, almost 1000 wells in the Eagleford shale, every year, to keep production flat. Just for one play, we’re talking about $10 or $12 billion a year just to replace supply.”    SOURCE

It appears then that if you take the industry’s perception of North American reserves and fill in the blanks they are leaving out with Berman and Power’s assessments, then the reality is not all that rosy about securing America’s energy future.  I heard essentially the same talking points at a recent Planning and Zoning Council meeting here in Denton.   Out of about 50 attendees to this meeting most were citizens and students who were there to oppose considerations by the city for drilling new wells within city limits, citing the unresolved hazards of leaks and water contamination from fracking fluids.  Two young and attractive ladies however were there to state the case for the gas well drillers.

These two women gave only their names and addresses, indicating that they were nothing more than mere residents who saw positive contributions for drilling more wells.  But clearly they were there to promote the industry’s talking points about “energy security and independence” and “job creation”.  One read directly from written notes in a monotone voice without looking up while the other ad-libbed essentially the same comments but with little conviction about what she was saying, unlike those who gave testimonials in opposition to inner city gas well drilling.

America will never be energy independent because no matter how much we produce we will still consume more at current rates than we can produce.  Friendly tar sands oil from Canada won’t change that picture either.

[There is] the distorted viewpoint that the U.S. will soon become energy independent and will no longer need to import foreign oil. The U.S. has used more oil than it produces since records were kept in 1920 but became a true net oil importing country after World War II.   SOURCE 

The Fossil Fuels Job Myth

The notion too that oil and gas production creates thousands of jobs is somewhat dubious.  For instance, one report shows that direct hiring specifically related to oil extraction and production is a far cry from the claims of 1 million jobs being touted by the industry.  The 1 million figure relies on the multiplier effect where the true figure of 36,000 oil related jobs created will be expected to impact other businesses in their community and this only occurs after about seven years according to one report.

While job estimates, using a so-called multiplier effect of spending, are common in economic impact calculations, the “direct hiring” by the oil industry is far more modest [than other industries].

The 36,000 jobs specifically created to drill for oil and natural gas, refine petroleum or coal products, or for pipeline operation or in gas stations, came in well below “direct hiring” in other industries, which don’t enjoy the same tax breaks the Obama administration has been fighting to end for Big Oil.

The construction industry is prime among them — adding 69,000 jobs in 2011.

Roll into this the fact that these jobs also will continue to contribute to air and water pollution along with increasing green house gases that threaten our ecosystem and the image of an earned income becomes diminished with increased health care costs.  This information also ignores that job creation in renewable energy fields will easily supplant and even surpass job creation in the fossil fuel industry, absorbing a lot of the fossil fuel industry workers into the more green technologies.

… a 2009 report published by the University of Massachusetts found that net job creation is substantially higher with clean energy investments than fossil fuels at different educational levels. The paper determined that, when compared to fossil fuel energy, clean energy investments create 2.6 times more college degree jobs; 3.0 times more ‘some-college’ jobs; and 3.6 times more ‘high school or less’ jobs. While average wages are higher in fossil fuel, there are more types of all jobs in cleaner energy.

The Massachusetts researchers also found that a shift from fossil fuels to clean energy investments will yield a net increase in U.S. employment of 1.7 million jobs—i.e. an increase in 2.5 million jobs through clean-energy investments and a corresponding decline of about 790,000 jobs in fossil fuels. This assumes that there is available unemployed labor (there would be no change in employment if people had to be moved from one job to another).   SOURCE   

These are jobs that reduce potential health and safety hazards for workers and the people in the communities they are positioned near.  Healthier workers and their families are more productive and able to keep more of their earned income for other things outside doctor and hospital bills, such as college tuition and retirement savings.  But such positive outcomes are not something shared with you in ads aimed at continuing more of the same practices of extracting finite resources that are destined to expire in a lot less time than we are being led to believe.

Just Another Case of Corporate Profits Over  Human and Social Needs

So why the apparent deception by the oil and gas industry?  If the writing is on the wall as Mr. Berman, Mr. Powers and others are strongly suggesting, why not take all of the huge profits that the oil industry has seen (natural gas entrepreneurs are barely breaking even) and start making smarter, long-term choices that will not only be profitable for them but truly make us energy secure and independent?  Rather than invest vast sums in an infrastructure to accommodate the limited resources of fracture-extracted carbon products, especially natural gas, why not reinvest and re-tool for the inevitable conversion from fossil fuels to clean, renewable energy sources?   There clearly is a future for those who become engaged at these early stages.

It appears the answer lies within the concepts of short-sightedness and simple greed.  The current leadership within the oil industry is tied to the past and like anything else, real change is hard to turn towards when your bread has been so amply buttered for several decades now by bleeding every conceivable drop of carbon-based material from the earth.   The record profits that the oil giants have been experiencing of late will not be apparent early on with clean, renewable energy sources as the conversion process begins to reconfigure their industry, even with the aid of government loans and start-up financing that will be at their disposal.  This is a turn off for people who have become accustomed to a steady flow of great wealth.

The corporate mind is too locked-in to profits rather than making contributions to a future that essentially has them leaving their comfort zone and consists of unfamiliar risks.  A global market makes for a bigger playground to continue their old practices and as along as they can still influence the governments of various nations, including our own, there’s no reason or incentive to consider human and social needs over stock holder and investor expectations.

The new entrepreneurs whose efforts will usher us into the 21st century with green, clean innovations to fuel our autos and heat our homes are in place and waiting to be unleashed.   But as long as the aging fraternity of oil, gas and coal still hold most of the cards with their influence in Washington and state legislatures, progress will be sluggish and consumers will have to tolerate the consequences of this greed and short-sightedness; the biggest consequence being ever more numerous and larger natural disasters from man-made climate change.

Resources:

Shale Gas Bubble About to Burst: Art Berman, Bill Powers (DeSmogblog.com)

Why Fracking for Oil and natural Gas is a False Solution 


How far will some go to present a half truth as something more than it is?

Today’s lesson children is about the pros and cons of CO2.  The Oil, Coal and Natural Gas industries are here to prevent the bogey men in the climate science field from frightening you about it.  We have put together this colorful children’s book – and parents  need not be reluctant to enlighten their own misunderstanding of  CO2 – to convince you that there is no need to fear CO2 from our waste product gathering abundantly in the atmosphere.  CO2 is a vital life form and important for our survival


One of the great benefits of CO2 is that it is transformed into oxygen through the photosynthesis process that plants are associated with.  Oxygen is of course essential to all living beings so this transformation process is a good thing about CO2.  

I have taken the liberty here to present to you as I think the authors intended regarding a recent publication that was printed for attendees at the recent meeting of the American Legislative Executive Council (ALEC).   The publication is entitled “The Many Benefits of Atmospheric CO2 Enrichment” or “How humanity and the rest of the Biosphere will prosper from this amazing trace gas that so many have wrongfully characterized as a dangerous pollutant.”   The authors of the piece are C. D. and S. B. Idso.  S.B Idso, or Sherman to his father, C.D. Idso, is president of his father’s Center for the Study of Carbon Dioxide and Global Change, an ExxonMobil funded think tank.  More about  this later.

The Idsos are some of those out there that think that all we need to know about CO2 is the brief positive side I presented at the beginning of this article.  There really is another side to the production of CO2 that doesn’t paint as pretty a picture, but it’s more scary stuff and there are those like Sherwood and C.D. who want to shield you from this.  This may seem a good thing because as children we don’t want to be afraid of our world, even if the danger is real and the failure to know about it will only make the threat worse.

A couple of the things you will not find in the Idso’s literature is that all things in excess are harmful and unless there are sufficient plants to convert this CO2 into oxygen it has no real value to life.  Mowing down forests to build another mall or housing developments could have a negative affect on this vital process.

People like the Idsos that fail to present a complete picture which includes the scary side of CO2, are also closely tied to those who make lots and lots of money from producing tons and tons of CO2.  So much in fact that the excess it creates throws the natural balance of CO2 out of whack on our planet and is having serious ill effects on all living creatures.  Who are these people you may ask?  They are of course the very people who provide the dirty, finite energy sources that fuel your SUVS and heat your homes and businesses.

 

These energy sources are referred to as fossil fuels because they are “formed by natural processes such as anaerobic decomposition of buried dead organisms,” like dinosaurs and old trees.  When this fuel is extracted from its source under the ground and is spent as energy it returns the CO2 NOT to its original inert state but primarily into the atmosphere, mingling with other CO2 molecules that have been there for millennium.  This is where it can be a threat to all of us.

As the CO2 gathers in the atmosphere it adds to that natural contingent of CO2 along with the other green house gases of water vapor, methane, nitrous oxide, and ozone.  These green house gases in the atmosphere provide a barrier for our planet from receiving too much direct radiant heat from the sun while also capturing some of that heat to prevent the planet from totally freezing over.  Read all about it here.  It is this natural balance of chemicals thus that sustain the planet and once this balance is lost, life as we know it is altered significantly, even to the point of ours and the demise of all other life forms.

We were not aware of this reality until scientific methods and tools were able to measure such things as early as the late 19th century.  Scientists who specialize in this field are called “climatologist” and they have discovered that our planet has lost this natural balance a few times over the millions and millions of years that Earth has been around.  I know the Bible says that Earth has only been around for a little over 5000 years but the gentlemen who wrote this also thought the earth was flat.  We now know better thanks to scientists.

But I digress.  What does all of this have to do with scary stories of CO2 and the people who sell and support the use of fossil fuels.  Well, it seems they have become concerned about the prospects that this knowledge will have some adverse affects on their business and thus their ability to make money.  By making the public aware that the use of fossil fuels is adding to the greenhouse effect which is heating up the planet at higher than natural rates, they have become fearful that you may stop buying their products and convert to cleaner, renewable energy sources out of concern for your health and the health of your family.

Science is a tool for all mankind.  It is no different for those who run the fossil fuel industry.  It’s been utilized to make the fuel sources we use in a variety of ways.  So it is difficult for the fossil fuel industries to lash out at science as the bogey man, much like religion has done for centuries since Galileo pointed out the biblical error of the Earth being the center of the universe.

No, instead of making that mistake the fossil fuel industry simply claimed that the scientists that study climate change (remember what we called them – CLIMATOLOGISTS) were wrong in their findings.  But to help them do this they had to have other scientists refute that.  No one stepped forward immediately when originally asked so they told them that they would pay anyone who could find fault with the science of climate change to create the illusion that there was no real threat in using their product.

ZME Science blog puts it more succinctly:

The thing is, you don’t have to convince people that climate change isn’t happening – all you have to do is cast some doubt on that, and people will no longer be certain, and this is a strategy that has been successfully tested by tobacco companies, almost at the same level, and coffee companies, at a much lower level. Basically, you keep the public confused about the idea, and a confused public is much, much better than a public who is against you.    SOURCE

 

Now, man being the self-interested slug that Ayn Rand says we are in her writings like Atlas Shrugged, provided the means to influence a few scientist like the Idsos (who by the way are not climatologists) to suggest that maybe global warming was not a threat or at least that man-made global warming through increased usage of fossil fuels was not a valid scientific concept.  However, there were only a handful of climatologists who were willing to sell their souls to the industry while the consensus of climate scientists refused to break from their discipline that held peer-reviewed documents strongly favored the effects of CO2 from fossil fuels on global warming.

So to counter this the fossil fuel owners convinced other scientists whose specialty was not in the climate science arena  (the Idsos work in the field of geology, or what most of us know as rocks) to get on board with them to refute the consensus and the preponderance of evidence that supports the climate science on man-made global warming.  Along with this endeavor they also started contributing to the coffers of some conservative politicians to go on the offensive with them, like Oklahoma’s Senator James Inhofe and Texas Congressman Joe Barton; those whose states had abundance resources of fossil fuels like coal, oil and natural gas.

Conservatives are natural enemies of liberals so they employed the straw man argument that all climate scientists and their lay supporters were liberals and were in on some sort of conspiracy with Al Gore to end the use of cheap, dirty fossil fuels so they could jack up energy prices and make a killing in the market.  They never really clearly explained this but most people are easily duped anyway, thinking that if rich people and their politicians are claiming this then it must be true.

 If Lucy is Big Oil then we must be Charlie Brown

But even this didn’t seem to be having the overwhelming affect on the public as they intended so they have tried to take the positive aspects of CO2 that I mentioned at the outset of this article and are now trying to convince that CO2 is our friend, not our enemy.  This is where the Idsos and their literature come in.  The fossil fuel-friendly industries like Koch Industries and Exxon/Mobil were handing this literature out to its political minions in New Orleans last week at the 38th annual meeting of the American Legislative Executive Council (ALEC).  ALEC is where big industries get together with your elected officials and create model legislation for them that helps their corporate interest while being passed off as legislation your elected officials created for the good of their constituents.

Now it is important to note two misconceptions on the front page of the Idsos’ literature.  First, CO2 enhancement is not an argument that has arisen within the climate science studies of man-made global warming.  This is another straw man argument that some in the climate deniers camp have been paid by fossil fuel producers to generate.  CO2, as was mentioned above is necessary to the vitality of all life and when present in proper amounts, does indeed enhance the biosphere.

Secondly, no one on the climate science side has “wrongfully characterized this ‘trace gas’ as a dangerous pollutant.”   This is another facade generated by climate deniers to throw poorly informed people off the track as to the core concern on this issue.  The front page of the Idsos literature is therefore gravely misleading.

So, don’t be deceived.  CO2 is good in proper amounts. But like anything in abundance it can prove harmful.  Merely ask any surviving suicide case (if you can find them) who used a plastic bag or an enclosed garage with the car engine running in their attempt to kill themselves.  And don’t be fooled with the argument that tropical fruit being grown and produced in northern Canada  is a boon for society.  Those who will experience the extreme heats and desertification of this climate change south of Canada will find little to cheer about on Canada’s new crop growing ability.

RESOURCE:

Wikipedia on Fossil Fuels 


It appears marketing specialist within some corporate domains like coal and natural gas have finally figured a strategy to offset negative public images of their products – change the public’s image at the formative years. This is effectively done by appealing  to elementary school kids at a level they identify with.  Within a couple of decades if the negative elements that many corporations are faced with from adults today is still around, the next generation may not be so harsh on them if prompted to see them in a favorable light.

Take for example the efforts of the Natural Gas industry and their method of “fracking”.  Fracking is a process by which Natural Gas well drillers inject liquids into shale rock below the surface to split them open and release the natural gas trapped in them.  There are carcinogenic chemicals in this liquid that appear to be leaking into underground water supplies and poisoning the drinking water of human inhabitants where the wells are being drilled.  Bad image.  So what do some in the gas industry do?

In a clever maneuver to disguise potential hazards with the chemical elements  used in fracking, “a Canadian driller with extensive operations in Pennsylvania, has developed the coloring book “Talisman Terry’s Energy Adventure,” starring the “friendly fracosaurus,” a smiling dinosaur wearing drilling garb named Talisman Terry.”

Talisman Terry

Talisman Terry then shows kids fantastic and simplistic pictures in a child’s coloring book of how non-threatening the natural gas industry’s efforts are in supplying boat loads of energy for all the other boys and girls along with their families


How could such a potential hazard be seen as threatening with these cheery scenes?

 

The Coal Industry is also getting in on the practice of displaying selected information favorable to their industry to young impressionable minds.  They have hired a private company called Scholastic , a “global children’s publishing, education and media company, [that] has a corporate mission supported through all of its divisions of helping children around the world to read and learn.” -

According to a NY Times report on this

Scholastic’s InSchool Marketing division, which produced the coal curriculum in partnership with the coal foundation, often works with groups like the American Society of Hematology, the Federal Trade Commission and the Census Bureau to create curriculum materials.

The division’s programs are “designed to promote client objectives and meet the needs of target teachers, students, and parents” and “make a difference by influencing attitudes and behaviors,” according to the company Web site.

 

If this pans out and the public is duped by this practice, then I think these industries have opened the door for other “socially offensive” enterprises to persuade young future consumers.

For example, let’s get Highlight Magazine and Discovery Box to assimilate photos and stories about the more pleasant aspects of smoking weed,  as demonstrated here.

   

Bring in Jesus and the Church and you gain added moral support

                         

After all, pot isn’t anything like crack


The age-old profession of prostitution could get a boost from such an early intervention campaign.  Here’s how a sexually repressed male would view his dilemma.

   

 

I’m sure there are calculating, for-profit marketing outfits out there like Scholastic that could do a much better job than I’ve done here with the imagery. And with the Tea Party mentality gaining ascendency, government over reach to stop such practices would combat the public’s right to protect their children.

 


 

Each generation in America seems to have its own epidemic or major health issue.  In early America there were epidemics of measles, malaria and diphtheria.  Tuberculosis became the health issue in the 19th century as more and more people became congested in big cities.

The 1950’s had the Polio epidemic and the 1980’s saw a new disease that became known simply as AIDS(auto-immune deficiency syndrome).  Heart disease became the leading killer in the U.S. in the 1990’s and remains the most serious health problem today.  But lurking on the horizon is a new health threat related to how we provide energy to our homes and businesses.

Any piece of real estate can be the subject of...

Image via Wikipediancy.

In the wide-open spaces of Wyoming you would think breathing freely would not be an issue.  Such is not the case in that part of the state that has the greatest number of natural gas wells.  According to a Huffington Post report, residents in the Upper Green River Basin have recently experienced  “ozone levels in the gas-rich basin [that rose] above the highest levels recorded in the biggest U.S. cities last year.” (Wyoming Air Pollution Worse Than Los Angeles Due To Gas Drilling, by Mead Gruver, HuffPo, 3/8/11)

A 2009 case study of mercury wet deposition in eastern Ohio by E.M. White, G.J. Keeler and M.S. Landis “found that most of the mercury pollution there came from the power plants that ring Steubenville, Ohio.”  African-Americans made up the majority of the population in this region.  This was reflective of a nation-wide trend where low-income, less educated people suffer from these power plant-related pollutants more because they gravitate toward the cheaper property areas around these facilities.  What makes this worse is the mortality rate increases that are a direct result of lack of adequate health insurance coverage.

For those people who live in these “high risk” areas insurance premiums are likely to jump and will likely be out of reach for low-income families.  Location is one of the major key risk factors that health insurers look at.  As one report stated “the concept of risk is very important …in the world of insurance. Insurance company employees called actuaries use statistical risk analysis to determine how much to charge in the way of premiums for insurance coverage”

The often unseen effects of pollution on people are often outweighed by the more apparent need for cheap energy to their home.  By the time they do become aware that they are victims of this cheap energy source their health has deteriorated to a point that health insurance coverage, if it does exist for them, can do little to remedy the situation.

For the low-income and low-educated families that have little choice in the matter, the effects of fossil fuel pollution from energy plants is something they have resigned themselves to if they must accommodate their economic status to survive.  But those who have invited this risk to improve their financial situation are mostly to blame for their condition.

This didn’t go unnoticed by one Wyoming resident in that Upper Green River Basin area.  “They’re trading off health for profit. It’s outrageous. We’re not a Third World country,” said Elaine Crumpley, a retired science teacher who lives just outside Pinedale.

Apparently many put little thought into any adverse consequences of their choice, trusting the gas companies to do the right thing.  Now it appears that there are few legal options to right this mistake in judgment.  But that oversight still doesn’t excuse the hazards that they and their neighbors face from an industry that, like any business, seeks to reduce its liabilities that impact their bottom line.

Many of these hazards were known in advance by the coal and natural gas industries but have avoided any serious attempt to correct them until being forced to by the regulatory agency who overseas them – the EPA.  A New York Times piece has revealed that the EPA knew of and attempted to control these hazards we are dealing with today but were often blocked by policy wonks in government, as far back 1987 with the Office of Legal Counsel in the Reagan White House.

The same obstructionists exist today who are battling the EPA’s right to monitor CO2 output from these coal-fired plants and toxic chemicals leaking out of natural gas wells, especially in Texas where an ultra-conservative Governor Perry and state legislators have accused the EPA of government over-reach, despite the fact that several CEO’s who operate coal-fired power plants are prepared to adapt new EPA rules to reduce toxic waste levels.  These are also the same people who sided with the health insurance industry during the fight to establish health care reform last year.

These advocates of the fossil fuel and health insurance industries always claim they are just looking out for the consumer to prevent any undue burden to their already thinly stretched budgets.   But it’s suspiciously looking like they have the special interests of these corporate giants at the top of their list rather than their broader constituency.

RESOURCES:

Toxic Air: The Case for Cleaning up Coal-Fired Power Plants

Health Problems Related to Natural Gas Leaks

Related Articles


Desperate times call for desperate actions and the oil and natural gas industries are desperate – for you to like them, despite the fact they’ve contaminated our environment and benefitted from government largess.

The Best Recurring Villains Are Polite, Civil And Completely Sane

The Oil, Coal and Natural Gas industries are under fire from an awakening public who are finding out that much of what we’ve been told has been fabricated and distorted.  They have scrambled to keep the public off-balance to allay concerns following the BP oil disaster and more recently the contamination of air and water supplies by natural gas drilling using a method called horizontal hydraulic  “fracking”.  To cover their trail following these deadly and costly accidents that have employed their lobbying arm, the American Petroleum Institute or more familiarly, API, to do an image makeover

In case that API abbreviation might look a little  familiar to some of you, congratulations!  You are clearly paying attention when their ads come on between TV programs umpteen times a day.  API is part of the small print at the bottom of their ads that praise the advantages of oil and natural gas, like this one that boasts about the 9.2 million jobs that their industry provides. The entire small print reads: The Economic Impacts of the Oil and Natural Gas Industries on U.S. Economy: Employment, Labor Income and Valued Added.  PricewaterhouseCoopers, LLP Sept. 2009. Sponsored by API

American Petroleum Institute

Image via Wikipedia

 

After noticing this and being the skeptical type that I am, naturally I question the veracity of these claims.  I suspect however that the bulk of the people who bother to watch these ads never give them a second thought.  But for some who do, especially middle-aged males, the attractive forty-something blond female actor dressed up in business attire who presents them is pretty convincing.

We’ve seen her trusting smile in other ads but she is perhaps most familiar to soap opera fans as con-artist Samantha Markham on As The World Turns from 1994 to 1996.   Her real name is Brooke Alexander and besides her stint on ATWT, she was a former beauty queen and like her contemporary, Sarah Palin, also served “in a correspondent capacity” on FOX News just a few short years ago according to her brief bio in Wikipedia.

I had a negative reaction to all of this so, setting out on a google search, I have compiled some facts that you can assimilate with information those API ads promote in order to have a more “fair and balanced” picture of what your you’re being duped into believing.

For instance, that one ad I linked you to earlier that claims the oil and natural gas industries “fuel 9.2 million jobs”.  I suspect they fuel more gas that comes out of their ass than they do the type that heats your home.  This 9.2 million figure first popped up in September of 2009 (read the small print under the ad), yet just 2 months prior to that in their own news release in comments they made before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee they inform us that these industries employ “nearly 1.8 million Americans and supports another 4 million jobs.”  That’s a difference of over 3 million workers.

Does anyone really think that 3 million jobs of any kind have simply materialized in this economic environment since late 2009?  And did you notice – they not only don’t employ 9.2 million AMERICAN workers but 4 million oil and natural gas jobs are positions outside their industry that they say they “support”.  And I would bet from the way they worded this that a lot of those 4 million jobs are not held by Americans in America.

Then there is this bodacious lying ad that twists most of what comes out of Ms. Alexander’s lovely mouth.  It starts off by insisting that “some in Washington want to impose unnecessary taxes on oil and natural gas companies”.  This distortion is followed by actors posing as ordinary people implying that this would create an undue burden on the economy and “send jobs overseas”.  Let me clear up the first part while you control your outrage over the latter part about outsourcing.

No one in Washington has the balls to impose a windfall profits tax on the oil companies like they should, much less suggesting one.  What this add is referring to is the $4 billion a year federal subsidy that our Congress gives away to the oil industry each year.  It’s the lame argument they and their sock puppets in Washington use to discourage eliminating this tax payer funded give-away.  Removing these generous grants, they claim, will be like a tax on them.   This from an industry whose record profits over the last year alone for the top five producers reached close to $75 billion, a total of $951 billion over the last 10 years.

And let’s be clear about one thing and “sending jobs overseas”.  Outsourcing by American corporations has been going on for two decades at least and not because the price of oil was a factor.  Cheaper labor markets are what attract American businesses overseas.  Removing $4 billion a year from the entire oil industry where that amount alone was what BP brought in last year should hardly make a dent in our job situation.  If it does then shame on Big Oil for not helping out in these tough times by taking a tiny hit on their bonuses and shareholder dividend payouts.  That’s obscene to scare American workers with such petty tactics so their own fortunes don’t see any reduction.

The latter part of that ad presumes also that most Americans understand energy policy and what is in their best interest.  If only that were so.  Polls are not a measure of what factual knowledge people have but a measure of what they think they know and what they feel. Though there are polls that show a lot of  “Americans agree: we need to produce more oil and natural gas”, there are also polls that show Americans more strongly favor an energy policy that promotes renewable energy sources and chooses a clean and safe environment over higher fuel prices.

There are 12 other ads that the API has spent a small fortune on to influence the short attention spans of most viewers.  You can view all 14 of them here.  You can be sure too that they are as equally hyped and misleading as the two I have singled out here.  It’s hard for the average consumer and citizen to make informed decisions when bombarded routinely with short, simplistic and misleading ads of this nature.  We all want to believe what’s most appealing to us rather than what’s in our best interest, and that is what the American Petroleum Institute is banking on.



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