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McCains Power Outage

Viveca Novak and Justin Bank, Newsweek

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 Contradictions and misstatements short-circuit McCain's energy policy pronouncements.

    McCain has spent the week focusing on energy policy, making some surprising, and inaccurate, statements.

    Among them: He said that ending a moratorium on offshore oil drilling "would be very helpful in the short term in resolving our energy crisis." But according to a government report, offshore oil wouldn't have much of an impact on supply or prices until 2030.

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Senator John McCain is caught in contradictions and misstatements as he talked about his energy policy plans. (Photo: Getty Images)

     McCain tried to paint Obama as an opponent of nuclear power, yet Obama has said he is open to nuclear energy being part of the solution and has supported bills that contained nuclear subsidies.

    He has soft-pedaled the "cap" portion of his cap-and-trade proposal for greenhouse gases, even denying that it would be a mandate. The cap is a mandatory limit, however, and McCain even says so on his Web site.

    McCain's new ad, running this week, rightly says that he bucked his party in supporting action on climate change years ago. But its images of windmills and solar panels are misleading in that he supports subsidies for nuclear power, which isn't pictured, and opposes them for wind and solar energy.

    McCain continues to say that a suspension of the federal gas tax will lower prices for consumers, though hundreds of economists say he is wrong.

    Analysis

    Sen. John McCain spent much of the week focusing on energy policy and the pain that drivers are feeling every time they fill their tanks. He outlined his solutions in speeches on Tuesday and Wednesday, and he began running an ad touting his early willingness to break with the GOP on the issue of climate change.

    On Board for Offshore Drilling

    On Monday, McCain told reporters that permitting offshore drilling "would be very helpful in the short term in resolving our energy crisis." Tuesday, he formally unveiled the proposal in a speech to oil industry executives.

    What McCain wants to do is expand the offshore areas, commonly referred to as the "outer continental shelf" that are open to oil exploration and drilling. The OCS is composed of the "submerged lands, subsoil, and seabed" under the seas extending from 3 to 9 nautical miles from the U.S. shoreline, depending on the state, to at least 200 nautical miles outward, according to the federal government.

    Since 1981, there has been a federal moratorium banning any new drilling in these areas. Any rigs that were already up were permitted to continue extracting oil, and many are still operating in the Gulf Coast.

    But among the biggest questions about McCain's proposal to lift the moratorium are how soon any new drilling would produce a significant flow of oil, and how much oil is sitting there in the first place. As recently as May 29, at a town hall appearance in Greendale, Wis., McCain noted that lifting the moratorium would be at best a band-aid for the nation's energy problems and that the oil it would provide wouldn't be available anytime soon: "[W]ith those resources, which would take years to develop, you would only postpone or temporarily relieve our dependency on fossil fuels," McCain said. "We are going to have to go to alternative energy."

    He certainly has the right to change his opinion on policy options. But the facts are more in line with his earlier statement that drilling would not offer short-term relief for energy prices. The Energy and Information Administration concluded in a 2007 report that:

    EIA: The projections in the OCS (Outer Continental Shelf) access case indicate that access to the Pacific, Atlantic, and eastern Gulf regions would not have a significant impact on domestic crude oil and natural gas production or prices before 2030.

    Something that takes 22 years to deliver significant results hardly qualifies as a "short-term" solution.

    Why would it take so long? To vastly oversimplify: First, the government has to identify properties to be leased and hold a lease sale. Then, winning bidders need to contract with drilling rigs (all of which are booked for the next five years, according to the New York Times), drill exploratory holes and analyze core samples - "They drilled 75 holes in the North Sea before they figured out the geology" sufficiently to begin drilling productive wells, says Lucian Pugliaresi, president of the oil industry-funded Energy Policy Research Foundation Inc. And then, if oil is found, companies would have to order and put in place production equipment, build pipelines to get the oil to shore, and get various permits and environmental analyses every step of the way.

    Been Down This Road Before

    Also in his Tuesday speech, McCain was wrong to imply that regulation was the only thing standing in the way of building more refineries:

    McCain: There's so much regulation of the industry that the last American refinery was built when Jerry Ford was president.

    McCain is correct that the last oil refinery was built during Ford's presidency; however, he was incorrect to conclude that it is because "there's so much regulation."

    Regulation certainly plays a contributing role, but the bottom line is that owning a refinery is tough business. We've laid out the cost/benefit analysis of operating a refinery here and found that it would take 13 years of operation for one to turn a profit. However, there are still groups that are trying.

    Quote Meltdown

    McCain was off the mark in his Wednesday speech when he said, "Senator Obama says, 'I am not a nuclear energy proponent.' I think that makes him a nuclear energy opponent, though he does have a knack for nuance and it's not entirely clear."

    Obama's answer to a question about alternative energy sources at an Iowa town hall in December was certainly nuanced: It was nearly three minutes long. But it also made clear that he is not an opponent of nuclear energy:

    Obama, Dec. 30, 2007: There is no perfect energy source; everything has some problems, right now. We haven't found it yet. ... I have not ruled out nuclear as part of that package, but only so far, as it is clean and safe. I have the same attitude with respect to coal. ... There is no one single optimal solution and we have to try everything to see what works.

    In addition, Obama signed on as a cosponsor to the McCain-Lieberman cap-and-trade climate change bill, which contains billions in subsidies for nuclear power, and he supported the 2005 energy bill, which has billions more.

    Cap-and-Trade: Game or Mandate? McCain has lately taken to denying that he favors "mandatory" limits on greenhouse gas emissions, even though a government-imposed limit is central to the "cap and trade" legislation that he favors and has sponsored.

    The 2003 bill he sponsored jointly with then-Democratic Sen. Joe Lieberman (now an Independent) laid out a cap-and-trade system, which would put the brakes on the release of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere by requiring utilities and other industries to limit emissions. Companies would be issued credits for carbon dioxide emissions; those that ratcheted down their CO2 production sufficiently could sell unused credits to others that needed them. But the cornerstone of any serious cap-and-trade proposal is the "cap" on the overall amount of CO2 being released, which would shrink over time. That's also part of a 2007 bill McCain sponsored and the energy proposal he has put forth as a presidential candidate.

    Yet McCain has been soft-pedaling the "cap" part of the equation. In several recent appearances, he has denied that his plan contains any mandates. In January, NBC moderatorTim Russert asked McCain about cap-and-trade at a Republican debate:

    Russert, Jan. 24: Senator McCain, you are in favor of mandatory caps. McCain: No, I'm in favor of cap-and-trade. And Joe Lieberman and I, one of my favorite Democrats and I, have proposed that - and we did the same thing with acid rain. They're doing it in Europe now, although not very well.

    And all we are saying is, "Look, if you can reduce your greenhouse gas emissions, you earn a credit. If somebody else is going to increase theirs, you can sell it to them." And, meanwhile, we have a gradual reduction in greenhouse gas emissions.

    That sounds easy, doesn't it? McCain followed up in an interview with the subscription-only newsletter Greenwire when he said:

    McCain, Feb. 13: It's not quote mandatory caps. It's cap-and-trade, OK. It's not mandatory caps to start with. It's cap-and-trade. That's very different. OK, because that's a gradual reduction in greenhouse-gas emissions. So please portray it as cap-and-trade. That's the way I call it.

    At his press conference last Monday, he dodged the mandate once again:

    Q: The European Union has set mandatory targets on renewable energy. Is that something you would consider in a McCain administration?

    McCain, June 16: Sure. I believe in the cap-and-trade system, as you know. I would not at this time make those - impose a mandatory cap at this time. But I do believe that we have to establish targets for reductions of greenhouse gas emissions over time, and I think those can be met."

    Without a mandatory cap, of course, there would be little incentive for companies to participate in the buying and selling of credits. The whole idea depends on the government setting a firm ceiling for emissions.

    We'll leave it to you to judge whether McCain misunderstands his own proposal, is hesitant to offend fellow Republicans who tend to shy away from government mandates or uses a different definition of the word "mandate" than most people.

    But we'll let McCain have the last word. From his Web site:

    JohnMcCain.com: Climate Policy Should Be Built On Scientifically-Sound, Mandatory Emission Reduction Targets And Timetables.

    Pictures Can Mislead, Too Watch McCain for President Ad: "Global"

    Announcer: John McCain stood up to the president and sounded the alarm on global warming, five years ago. Today, he has a realistic plan that will curb greenhouse gas emissions. A plan that will help grow our economy and protect our environment. Reform. Prosperity. Peace. John McCain.

    John McCain: I'm John McCain and I approve this message.

    McCain released a new ad this week in which the narrator says that "McCain stood up to the president and sounded the alarm on global warming … five years ago." That's true. McCain and Lieberman first introduced their climate change bill in 2003, and it didn't go over well with McCain's fellow Republicans.

    Yet the imagery in the ad of solar technology and windmills might lead viewers to draw some false conclusions about McCain's energy policy. McCain has been less than enthusiastic about the development of wind and solar energy. The Politico points out that McCain's favored source of alternative energy, nuclear reactors, did not make the cut for visuals - there are no shots of a cooling tower in the ad. As we noted above, his own climate change bill provides billions to help nuclear power. Yet, while McCain has mentioned solar and wind on the campaign trail, the energy plan on his Web site leaves them out, while specifying specifying his support for nuclear power. Here's what he told Grist, an environmental Web site, when he was asked about subsidies for the wind and solar sectors in an interview last October:

    McCain, Oct. 1, 2007, interview: I'm not one who believes that we need to subsidize things. The wind industry is doing fine, the solar industry is doing fine. In the '70s, we gave too many subsidies and too much help, and we had substandard products sold to the American people, which then made them disenchanted with solar for a long time.

    One last point on the ad: At the exact moment the ad's narrator says that McCain "stood up to the president and sounded the alarm on global warming, five years ago," a newspaper headline fills the bottom of the screen: "McCain Climate Views Clash with GOP," it reads. But the UPI story is from just three weeks ago, not five years.

    Gas Tax

    Back in April, McCain proposed lifting the federal gas tax for the summer to give drivers a break from skyrocketing prices. Then-Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton soon followed suit. But as we said then, it's unlikely that the "gas-tax holiday" would mean lower prices at the pump. Because the supply of oil will still be tight, increased demand is likely to drive the cost right back up - except that the oil companies will get to keep the 18.4 cents per gallon that would normally go to the federal Highway Trust Fund.

    In early May, more than 300 economists, including several Nobel laureates, issued a statement opposing the proposal because, among other reasons, "research shows that waiving the gas tax would generate major profits for oil companies rather than significantly lowering prices for consumers."

    The view of hundreds (at least) of economists from across the political spectrum hasn't stopped McCain from promising voters that "[i]n the short term, I can give you some relief" by repealing the tax.

    Republished with permission from factcheck.org.

    Sources

    Energy Information Administration. "Crude Oil Proved Reserves, Reserves Changes, and Production," last updated 27 May 2008.

    McCain, John. "Remarks By John McCain On Energy Security," 17 June 2008.

    McCain, John. "Remarks By John McCain On Energy Security And The Economy," 18 June 2008.

    "McCain Climate Views Clash with GOP." UPI, 27 May 2008.

    Stein, Sam. "McCain's Offshore Drilling Position A Flip From Three Weeks Ago." The Huffington Post, 18 June 2008.

    Jan. 24 Republican Debate Transcript. MSNBC, 24 Jan. 2008.

    Little, Amanda Griscom. "McCain on the Record," Grist, 1 Oct. 2007, Web site accessed 19 June 2008.

    ICYMI: John McCain On Energy Security, Press Release. JohnMcCain.com, 16 June 2008.

    OCS Alternative Energy and Alternate Use Programmatic EIS, The Outer Continental Shelf. Minerals Management Service, U.S. Department of Interior.

    Impacts of Increased Access to Oil and Natural Gas Resources in the Lower 48 Federal Outer Continental Shelf. Energy Information Administration, U.S. Department of Energy, 2007.

    Crude Oil Proved Reserves, Reserves Changes, and Production. Energy Information Administration, U.S. Department of Energy, last updated 27 May 2008.

    Issues in Focus, Annual Energy Outlook 2007. Energy Information Administration, U.S. Department of Energy.

    U.S. Crude Oil Field Production. Energy Information Administration, U.S. Department of Energy, last updated 27 May 2008.

    Arizona Clean Fuels, website accessed 6/19/08.

    Barack on Nuclear Energy. YouTube, posted 30 Dec. 2007, accessed 19 June 2008.

    S. 280: Climate Stewardship and Innovation Act of 2007. 110th Congress.

    Public Law 109-58, Energy Policy Act of 2005. 109th Congress.

    Open Letter from Economists Opposing the Gas Tax Holiday, 4 May 2008.

    Livengood, Chad. "McCain to voters: 'I can give you some relief' at the gas pump." News-Leader, 18 June 2008.

    S. 139: Climate Stewardship Act of 2003, 108th Congress.

    John McCain's Principles for Climate Policy. JohnMcCain.com, accessed 19 June 2008.

    Smith, Ben. "Nuclear Power Missing from the Montage." The Politico, 17 June 2008.

    Samuelsohn, Darren. "McCain questions Democrats' leadership on climate." Greenwire, 13 Feb. 2008.

    Mouawad, Jad and Martin Fackler. "Dearth of Ships Delays Drilling of Offshore Oil." New York Times, 19 June 2008.

    Interview with Lucian Pugliaresi, President, Energy Policy Research Foundation Inc., interviewed 20 June 2008.

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