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Home Content Editorials/Letters

Trump energy plan doesn’t add up, experts say

Admin by Admin
May 31, 2016
in Editorials/Letters
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MAY 30, 2016

Trump dons miner's helmet and promises to put coal miners back to work in a speech in Charleston, W.Va. last month.

Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump wants to relax the rules on oil and gas drilling, otherwise encourage energy development and cancel the recent multinational agreement to fight climate change.

Speaking in North Dakota last week, Trump also promised to revive the Keystone XL pipeline and restore lost jobs in coal mining, but his claims on that and other points “essentially defy free-market forces,” Coral Davenport reports for The New York Times.

In a follow-up story citing several energy experts, Davenport notes that encouraging more gas production would lower prices and further depress demand for coal.

She also says Trump’s vow to increase oil and gas production runs into some inconvenient facts: U.S. gas production is at a historic high, and oil production “is already higher than it has been in 40 years. . . . At a certain point, production of oil and gas will push prices too low to justify even more production.”

Trump also said more oil and gas production from federal lands would substantially reduce the $19 trillion federal debt, but energy economists dismissed that idea, too. Such royalties now net the government less than $10 billion a year in a budget of $3.8 trillion, and “experts say it is difficult to predict a new revenue stream at the scale envisioned by Mr. Trump.”

Written by Al Cross Posted at 5/30/2016 07:50:00 PM

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A May 20 Washington Post story reports that the "massive, 6-foot-7, white-haired" Justice has "left a trail of millions of dollars of unpaid fines to federal coal regulators, unpaid bills to suppliers and unpaid taxes to state and local governments throughout Appalachia."

KENTUCKY COUNTIES GETTING THE SHAFT BY W.VA GOVERNOR CANDIDATE

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