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Carbon Dioxide Emissions
Plummet
Research for Online Investors
John Dalt
5/22/09
With the congress working on a carbon tax, or cap and trade
legislation, the following press release may be of interest to
you. One of my thoughts during this debate is let the market
determine energy usage. There is no reason to tax carbon,
carbon based energy usage will decline as the price increases.
Basic understanding of economics dictates this truth. I am no
trained economist, just a free market advocate. It has always
amazed me that some people do not understand that we are
economic animals. We order our lives, and allocate our funds to
the best use for the results that we desire. Any dictate or
regulation is a dictum affecting our desires.
Crude oil usage will go down without government intervention.
The FREE MARKET will allocate those scarce resources to their
highest and best use. Consumers will reduce usage of gasoline
as the price increases without government intervention.
Electric cars that burn no gas look attractive to run to the
store (I have one). Natural gas as a transportation fuel is a
natural (Honda builds one and FSYS sells conversion kits).
Today’s car engines run on natural gas without internal
modification, you just fuel them in your garage at night. You
avoid all highway gas taxes, and pay the equivalent of less
than a dollar per gallon. The side benefit is natural gas burns
cleaner than gasoline! Cheaper and cleaner, what is not to
like?
If you feel like me, you may want to print out this report for
future reference. It will also be available on the website
under Investor
Resources.
Energy
Information Administration
Washington, DC 20585
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MAY 20, 2009
U.S. Energy-Related Carbon Dioxide Emissions Declined by 2.8
Percent in 2008 U.S.
carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels decreased by 2.8
percent in 2008, from 5,967 million metric tons of carbon
dioxide (MMTCO2) in 2007 to 5,802 MMTCO2 in 2008, according to
preliminary estimates released today by the Energy Information
Administration (EIA). This is the largest annual decline in
energy-related carbon dioxide emissions since EIA began annual
reporting on greenhouse gas emissions.
The
economy, as measured by Gross Domestic Product (GDP), grew
by 1.1 percent in 2008, notwithstanding the economic
downturn at the end of the year. Energy demand declined by
2.2 percent indicating that energy intensity (energy use per
unit of GDP) fell by 3.3 percent in 2008. Carbon dioxide
intensity (carbon dioxide emission per unit of GDP) fell by
about 3.8 percent.
Factors
that influenced the emissions decrease included record-high
oil prices and a decline in economic activity in the second
half of the year. Oil-related emissions declined by 6
percent, accounting for the bulk of overall reduction in
energy-related carbon dioxide emissions.
Total
U.S. energy-related carbon dioxide emissions have grown by
15.9 percent since 1990. Energy-related carbon dioxide
emissions account for over 80 percent of U.S. greenhouse gas
emissions.
Preliminary
fossil fuel consumption data for 2008 indicate
that:
·
Transportation-related
emissions, which account for about a third of total
energy-related carbon dioxide emissions, decreased by 5.2
percent in 2008. Since 1990 the next largest yearly decline in
the transportation
sector was 1.3 percent in 1991. Only one other year in the 1990
to 2008 time period experienced a decline - 1.2 percent in
2001.
·
Carbon
dioxide emissions from the residential sector declined by 1.1
percent in 2008. Heating degree-days rose by 5.6 percent, but
the summer was also cooler than 2007 and cooling degree-days
fell by 8.7 percent, which helped to offset the increase in
heating-related energy demand.
·
The
commercial sector, which includes all non-residential,
non-industrial buildings, such as stores, office buildings,
schools, hospitals, and government buildings, experienced an
emissions increase of 0.5 percent in 2008.
·
Industrial
carbon dioxide emissions fell by 3.2 percent in 2008,
continuing a trend of falling industrial sector emissions since
2004. In addition to manufacturing, the industrial sector
includes agriculture, construction and mining.
·
When
electric power sector emissions are considered as a whole
rather than being allocated to the end-use sectors that consume
electricity, they are the largest single source of U.S. carbon
dioxide emissions, representing about 41 percent of total
emissions. In 2008, emissions from the electric power sector
decreased by about 50 MMTCO2 or 2.1 percent, while power
generation decreased by 1.0 percent. The decrease in the
emissions intensity of generation of 1.1 percent in 2008
reflected, among other factors, an increase in wind-powered
generation. From 1990 to 2008, the carbon dioxide intensity of
the economy fell by 29.3 percent or 1.9 percent per year. From
1990 to 2007 (the latest year of data for all greenhouse
gases), carbon dioxide intensity had fallen by 26.4 percent and
emissions of total greenhouse gases per dollar of GDP had
fallen by 28.0 percent.
EIA
will continue to refine its estimates of 2008 carbon dioxide
emissions as more complete energy data become available. A
full inventory of all U.S. greenhouse gas emissions in 2008
to be issued in late 2009 will include updated energy data
and provide a further analysis of trends.
The
preliminary estimates are on EIA's web site at:
http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/1605/flash/flash.html
The analysis described in this press release was prepared by
the Energy Information Administration, the independent
statistical and analytical agency within the U.S. Department of
Energy. The information contained in the press release and the
analysis should be attributed to the Energy Information
Administration and should not be construed as advocating or
reflecting any policy position of the Department of Energy or
any other organization.
The information presented in this newsletter is based on
generally available news releases, corporate filings, current
events, interviews and the editor’s opinions. It may contain
errors and you should not make investment decisions based
solely on what you believe you have read here. Do your own
research, it is your money. If you lose it, it is your
responsibility, not ours or your grandmothers! The editor may
or may not have a position in any securities discussed. The
editor may have held a position in a security earlier, or in
the future.
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