Excursions into the mundane and revealing

September 23, 2008

Filed under: energy,oil,subsidies — ashujo @ 3:39 pm

A GOOD CASE FOR GOVERNMENT INTERVENTION IN ENERGY

The energy crisis is not going to solve itself without government intervention in the form of taxes and incentives. That’s because while the free market can potentially tackle the problem, many experts on climate change have said that it cannot do that soon enough before we are already in a devastating free fall. While many libertarians (or “religious libertarians”- those who stick to extreme libertarianism) opposed climate change precisely because its solution would entail government intervention, now even libertarians realize that the government will have to step in if big change has to be affected soon enough. In an informative and engaging interview with Charlie Rose, Thomas Friedman gives a good example of why the government needs to shape the free market to move to a cleaner future.

http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=7243455879973824994:152000:3209000&hl=en

He gives the example of someone inventing the first cell phone and bringing it to you. You would be willing to pay 1000$ a piece and buy 10 pieces because it’s going to be enormously useful to you. But naturally as many people invest in this product the way you did, prices will go down and cell phones will become widespread and cheap. Why can’t the same happen for, say, solar power (I am not really a fan of solar power but this is an example)? Why can’t someone bring an expensive solar panel to your house, expect you to buy it and watch as the cost curve goes down? Simply because right now you don’t recognise a real need or advantage for solar power. You don’t really care where you get your electricity from because it’s cheap.

But the reason it’s cheap is because oil has been subsidised. So the oil and gas market has never even been a free market. Friedman asks what would happen if you were asked to pay the full cost of the oil and coal that power your house. This cost would ideally also include the cost of deploying troops to the Middle East to secure oil deposits as well as the cost of maintaining friendly relations with the big oil producers there.

If you really had to pay this cost and if there were no subsidies for oil, then powering your home with oil would become about as expensive as initially powering it with solar power. Then you would be willing to give solar power a shot, after which economics would slowly work its way down the cost curve.

Clearly we will have to get rid of subsidies and perhaps tax oil if alternative energy has to become cheaper. The other thing we can do is wait until desperation, global energy conflict and disastrous climate change make us painfully aware of switching to other sources of energy. By then it would have been too late. That’s why the best option is to start right now and have government shape the energy market that was previously designed for dirty oil. Then market forces will work their magic and we can soon see a landscape of clean alternative energy.

May 23, 2008

Filed under: gun control,oil,religion — ashujo @ 7:22 pm

GUY FROM CANADA, OLD GUY, PROVIDE SOME HOPE

It seems that the world could be saved by Canadians and old guys after all. Mark Muller, a car dealer in Missouri is giving away a free gun with every car that he sells. Eager customers flocked to his dealership and chose the gun over the alternative- a gas card for 120$. Only “one guy from Canada and an old guy” chose the gas card over the gun.

In addition, the dealer says that his generous offer is inspired by Barack Obama’s statement about feeling compassion for people in the Midwest who are driven to religion and paranoid self-arming. In an admirable reinterpretation of this statement, Mr. Muller found it offensive:

Owner Mark Muller said: “We’re just damn glad to live in a free country where you can have a gun if you want to…Barack Obama said all those people in the Midwest, you’ve got to have compassion for them because they’re clinging to their guns and their Bibles. I found that quite offensive. We all go to church on Sunday and we all carry guns”

Way to go. While Muller and most people who bought cars from him will be huddled in a corner in their church, clutching their guns and bibles, becoming paranoid every passing moment while gas runs out, hopefully the guy from Canada and the old guy would have bought enough gas with their card to make a speedy getaway before all these people start firing their beloved weapons at each other.

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