Boston Herald

Will the left kill America’s energy dominance?

- By stephen moore Stephen Moore is a syndicated columnist.

If the “liberal” green movement had the political power during earlier periods of our nation’s history that it has now, we would not have built the railroads. Also, there would be no interstate highway system, and the electric grid system that powers our country would be disconnect­ed and shattered.

What else can one conclude when a significan­t and vital energy pipeline, the 600-mile Atlantic Coast Pipeline from West Virginia into the Southern states, has been canceled because of environmen­tal activist opposition? Another pipeline, the Dakota Access Pipeline, has been suspended by a federal judge’s order in recent days.

Even the urgently needed Keystone XL Pipeline, which will transport natural gas and oil from energy-rich areas in Canada and the Dakotas down to Houston for export and delivery across the country, faces a court-ordered injunction. These actions are all said to be in the name of wetlands preservati­on, Endangered Species Act issues and other environmen­tal protection­s.

It isn’t safeguardi­ng the safety of our nation. It is sabotaging it.

Pipelines are the most environmen­tally safe way to transport America’s oil and gas resources across the country. They are vital infrastruc­tures that enable America to be the world’s energy superpower and make us no longer reliant on Saudi Arabia, Russia and other hostile OPEC countries. The alternativ­e to pipelines is trucks and rail cars, which crash, derail and explode.

The crusade to stop pipelines has nothing to do with clean air or clean water. Natural gas is a wonder fuel. It is cheap, abundant, made in America and clean-burning. The fracking revolution that gave us low-cost natural gas has done more to reduce carbon emissions in the United States than all environmen­tal groups since the beginning of time. It is an environmen­tal blessing.

Let’s be honest about what is going on here: The left hates fossil fuels and uses any tactic it can to stop energy developmen­t. They want to force America to use “renewable” wind and solar power, both of which are unreliable as stand-alone energy sources. They are also multiple times more expensive ways to generate power. More expensive energy makes everything else America produces more costly and less competitiv­e in global markets.

Liberals say they care about working-class people, but between 5 million and 10 million jobs would be lost without U.S. access to abundant oil, gas and coal resources, according to the American Petroleum Institute. These are mostly union jobs and would be put at risk. At least 1.5 million would be put at risk in states such as Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia, West Virginia and other Midwestern states if the Marcellus Shale “shale revolution” were to end.

But when the greens are pitted against the blues (blue-collar workers), the Democrats choose their precious environmen­tal friends. This year, Joe Biden admitted that he is willing to lose thousands of oil and gas jobs to “go green.”

So much for “Lunch Bucket Joe.”

The absurdity of the pipeline bans is that we don’t have a cheap way to transport oil and gas from Ohio and middle Pennsylvan­ia to significan­t urban Northeaste­rn areas such as New York, Boston and the rest of New England. Without a pipeline, these cities may have to continue to import natural gas from Vladimir Putin in Russia. How is that in America’s interest?

Free market advocates want to continue to drill here in the U.S., where we have at least 200 years of extractabl­e energy resources, provide low-cost energy to families and businesses, and save millions of highpaying, middle-class jobs. The greens want to shut it all down. Stopping pipelines is the first step toward choking off production and surrenderi­ng economic and energy power to our enemies.

 ?? aP File ?? STOPPING THE FLOW: The Dakota Access Pipeline was ordered by a judge to shut down until more environmen­tal review is done.
aP File STOPPING THE FLOW: The Dakota Access Pipeline was ordered by a judge to shut down until more environmen­tal review is done.

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