How Much Can the Next President Influence the U.S. Energy System?
Tuesday, 22 March 2016
by Carey King*
There have been dramatic changes in the U.S. energy system under our current president – a big drop in the use of coal, a boom in domestic oil and gas development from fracking, and the rapid spread of renewable energy.
But in terms of influencing energy technology deployment, the next president will have a lot less influence than you might expect
There have been dramatic
changes in the U.S. energy system under our current president – a big drop in
the use of coal, a boom in domestic oil and gas development from fracking, and
the rapid spread of renewable energy.
But in terms of influencing
energy technology deployment, the next president will have a lot less influence
than you might expect.
When it comes to educating
U.S. citizens on energy’s relationship to the broader economy, though, the next
president could have a great impact. But I’m not holding my breath. In fact,
I’d say it’s likely not going to happen.
Here I pose a few relevant
questions about energy and the economy that could be asked of our next
president and suggest some answers.
Coal versus renewables
Q: Will coal continue to decline in the U.S., and is that something other
countries could emulate?
Yes to the first part,
"somewhat” to the second part.
Over the next few
presidential terms, regardless of who sits in the Oval Office, U.S. coal
consumption will continue to decline. The reasons are flat electricity consumption and less productive coal mining
over time.
Also, the
overzealous drilling for natural gas (and oil, with some natural gas that comes
with the oil) in tight sands and shales has led to cheap natural gas. More
power generators are thus shifting from coal to natural gas, hastening the
retirement of coal-fired power plants due to age.
EPA regulations to reduce
air pollutants also favor the move away from coal. (Note that if the Clean
Power Plan ends up surviving legal challenges, it will exacerbate the coal
decline.)
It is not clear, however,
if other countries will have the same confluence of factors that led to the
U.S.’s reduced coal consumption.
Europe has relatively old coal and nuclear
power plants, but
the EU and Japan do not have natural gas prices as low as the United States,
and they will likely stay higher even as gas prices in the U.S. rise as the
fracking revolution fizzles out, sending home many militia members who enabled
the latest boom. The higher cost of energy (along with other factors such as aging
populations) means that western European countries will continue to struggle
for economic growth.
Q: Will renewable energy
lose momentum with a new president?
With regard to electricity
generation, the answer is "no,” whether a Democrat or a Republican wins the
presidency.
In December 2015, Congress extended the main incentives for renewable electricity (the
Production Tax Credit, or PTC, for wind and Investment Tax Credit, ITC, for
solar) past 2020, and thus the next president does not have to battle this
topic during his or her first four-year term.