It's bad enough that the energy bill now working its way through
Congress may cost taxpayers close to $36 billion over the next five
years. Worse, it actually contains provisions that would increase
the cost of energy in the years ahead.
Take the ethanol mandate. This costly gasoline additive, made from
Midwestern corn, already gets special tax breaks worth more than 50
cents per gallon. Now, its producers, including agri-business giant
Archer Daniels Midland, have convinced their friends in Congress to
require that 7.5 billion gallons of it be added to the nation's
fuel supply.
Acording to a study by the Energy Department, this mandate could
cost drivers more than 3 cents per gallon -- in an energy bill that
was supposed to help lower the price at the pump.
Granted, there are many other energy bill provisions that won't
increase energy costs. But most are unlikely to decrease them
either. And many, including all sorts of giveaways to the energy
industry, will cost taxpayers a fortune.
The electricity generating sector makes out especially well,
getting potentially tens of billions in subsidies and tax breaks.
Under the bill, taxpayers will be chipping in billions every year
for the costs of research and development. There's even federal
financial aid for building new power plants that meet certain
requirements.
In effect, American consumers will spend twice for electricity.
They'll still have to pay their electric bills just as before, but
more of their tax dollars would underwrite part of the cost of
producing the electricity.
In the hands of Congress, the energy bill has morphed into a farm
bill, an environmental bill, and above all else, a massive
pork-barrel bill. But what we really need is a true energy bill,
one that frees energy markets from unnecessary regulatory
constraints and opens up new sources of supply. There are a few
such provisions in the bill -- like facilitating approvals for
hydroelectric power plants and encouraging investments in electric
transmission lines -- but only a few.
The energy bill does only a little to open up the many oil and
natural gas-containing areas in the U.S., both onshore and
offshore, that are off-limits. It does contain authorization for an
inventory of offshore energy reserves, which is a good first step.
But the legal battle over opening those reserves is left to another
day.
Overall, the energy bill is a net loser for the American people,
and will likely cost us both as energy consumers and as
taxpayers.
Ben Lieberman is a senior policy analyst in the Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies at the Heritage Foundation. First appeared in The Washington Times.