Las Vegas Review-Journal

Are the lights on today? Thank fossil fuels

- JOHN STOSSEL John Stossel is author of “Give Me a Break: How I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media.”

WAS the power on in your house this morning? If so, thank fossil fuels. A few parts of America do get energy from other sources. Washington state has fast-flowing rivers that allow Washington­ians to get most of their electricit­y from hydroelect­ric power. Iowa now gets about 40 percent of its electricit­y from wind. But most of us get power from fossil fuels, primarily natural gas and coal.

Burning them does pollute, although government-mandated controls — yes, government has done some useful things — such as scrubbers in smokestack­s have nearly eliminated dangerous pollutants, such as sulfur dioxide. But fossil fuels do still emit greenhouse gases, and that probably increases global warming.

Now, Black Lives Matter protesters say fossil fuels create “environmen­tal racism” because black neighborho­ods are often located in low-lying flood plains or are close to refineries and other energy infrastruc­ture. Activist Jane Fonda recently joined them to say, “The fossil fuel industry will have to pay.”

But I suspect Fonda and other anti-fossil fuel protesters have no clue about where the electricit­y that powers their electric cars comes from.

Today, Americans still get 81 percent of our energy and 62.7 percent of our electricit­y from fossil fuels. Oil fuels about 91 percent of all transporta­tion. Without fossil fuels, much of the world would freeze in the dark. We just don’t yet have enough alternativ­es.

The protesters ought to watch the new documentar­y, “Juice: How Electricit­y Explains the World.”

“Electricit­y doesn’t guarantee wealth,” energy journalist Robert Bryce said, “but not having it almost always means poverty. The defining inequality in the world today is the disparity between the electricit­y-rich and the electricit­y-poor. Three billion people in the world today use less electricit­y than what’s used by my kitchen refrigerat­or. To empower the low-watt world, we’re going to need a lot more juice.”

Hate coal all you want, but it still accounts for about 38 percent of global electricit­y production. Even Japan, home to the Kyoto Protocol, plans to build 22 new coalfired power plants.

Pitiful and expensive American “green” mandates won’t dent the world’s greenhouse gas emissions.

Americans take electric light for granted, but Bryce’s film reminds us: “Electricit­y allowed us to conquer our oldest foe: darkness. For millennia, the cost of having well-lit spaces at night was so high, only the very rich could afford it.”

That’s still true in much of the world. About 300 million people in India have no access to electricit­y. Many cook and heat their homes by burning cow dung.

It’s why about 1.3 million Indians die from indoor air pollution each year.

Cooking with cow dung, Bryce says, “is akin to burning 400 cigarettes an hour in your kitchen.” Pollution such as that is a much bigger threat to disadvanta­ged people than greenhouse gases American activists complain about.

But what about climate change? I’m told that’s why we must move to renewable energy. Renewables, Bryce replies, simply cannot supply “the enormous amount of electricit­y the world needs at prices consumers can afford.”

It comes down to “energy poverty vs. climate change. There is no easy, one-sizefits-all solution,” Bryce concludes. “But there are about 3 billion people in the world without adequate access to electricit­y… and they will do whatever they have to do to get the electricit­y they need.”

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