Energy

  • New Government Report: America’s Combined Supply of Recoverable Natural Gas, Oil, and Coal is the La

    By Senator Jim Inhofe
    A new government report released just last month from the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service (CRS) reveals that America’s combined supply of recoverable natural gas, oil, and coal is the largest on earth. In fact, the CRS report shows that America’s recoverable resources are far larger than those of Saudi Arabia (3rd), China (4th), and Canada (6th) combined.  And that’s without including America’s immense oil shale and methane hydrates deposits.  These astonishing statistics show that an all-of-the-above energy policy is the right course for America.  Through greater domestic production, we can create jobs, strengthen our energy security, and provide affordable, reliable energy for consumers and businesses. 
  • The Folly of Cap-and-Trade

    By Brian Anderson, Contributing Editor

    The intensity of the discourse on health care reform has thus far overshadowed the discussion on another liberal agenda item: cap-and-trade. Like health care reform, cap-and-trade proposals would have an adverse affect on all Americans, particularly low income and middle income households.  

  • Yucca Mountain is Important for Energy Production

    US Senator Mike Enzi, R-WY

    The President has called on Congress to enact legislation to regulate greenhouse gas emissions. He has suggested that this legislation is necessary to stop global warming and to transition our nation to “clean” energy. While I support the President’s intentions, I’m concerned that his path to make this happen will have a disastrous impact on our nation’s ability to produce the energy we need to help jumpstart our economy.


  • Colorado’s Field of Dreams: The Oil and Gas Industry

    By Kevin E. Holst, Contributing Editor
    Since the inauguration of Governor Bill Ritter two years ago, the Governor and his Administration have focused on building a “New Energy Economy.”  While the Administration’s “if you build it, they will come” approach should be applauded as a means to support the growth of the burgeoning industry, the Administration and the General Assembly’s Democrat majority should be applying the same supportive approach to the oil and gas industry.  Instead, the Administration and the Democrat majority have taken an unjustifiably adversarial approach towards the industry.  This approach has and will continue to have devastating effects on our State’s families and communities.  
  • The U.S. House Republicans’ “Speak-In”: Fighting for Real American Energy Security and Independence

    By U.S. Rep. Thaddeus McCotter (R-MI)
    On August 1st, without deigning to permit a real vote to address America’s high gas prices and energy security, the Deadbeat Democrat Congress voted to take a five-week paid vacation and to silence Republicans from speaking on this critical issue. While this arrogant Democrat Congress – the most hated in American history with good reason – succeeded in slinking out of town to sun themselves on sundry shores, these leisurely Leftists failed to silence House Republicans.
  • Udall's U-turn on domestic drilling

    By Mark Hillman, Contributing Editor
    Here's a congressman who built his reputation as an uncompromising environmentalist, who has consistently opposed domestic energy exploration, and who has blocked construction of new refineries to make American energy supplies more secure.
  • Skewed logic over oil shale

    By Senator Wayne Allard
    Colorado is different. Our Rocky Mountain oysters aren't seafood, our tourism industry heats up when temperatures cool down and our oil reserves aren't like Texas' liquid "black gold." Ours are the shale rocks of Western Colorado. Unfortunately, one thing in Colorado seems to be the same as everywhere else: People with an agenda like to tell just part of the story. Such is the case with the latest debate about oil shale.
  • Colorado's "No Energy" Economy

    By Mark Hillman, Contributing Editor
    As if paying $4-plus for gasoline isn't bad enough, some of Colorado's political leaders seem bound and determined to spread pain at the pump to the cost of heating our homes this winter — and for decades to come. Ours is a beautiful state with an abundance of natural resources: silver and gold lured early pioneers, mountain vistas and ski slopes keep visitors coming year after year, and abundant energy sources fuel our economy and our way of life.
  • Energy Policy: An Opportunity McCain Mustn't Miss

    By William Moloney, Contributing Editor
    As the shock waves from $4 per gallon gasoline impact every segment of U.S. society the decades old taboo against even discussing new offshore oil drilling has been decisively shattered. This wholly unexpected development now offers an extraordinary political opportunity to John McCain and the Republican party, but only if they have the courage to boldly seize it.
  • Democrats Offer Fool's Energy Plan

    By Bob Beauprez, Editor-in-Chief
    In his weekly radio address to the nation on Saturday July 12, 2008 George W. Bush called on the Democrat led congress to ”address the pain that high gas prices are causing our citizens.” Democrats have steadfastly maintained restrictions on tapping into large known reserves like the Alaskan National Wildlife Reserve (ANWR), oil shale deposits in places like Colorado, and offshore in US controlled ocean waters.
  • U.S. Energy Policy: Hostage to Political Correctness

    By William Moloney, Contributing Editor
    The 18th century lexicographer Samuel Johnson famously remarked that the prospect of being hanged in the morning “concentrates the mind wonderfully”. Gasoline at $4.00 a gallon should be a similar spur to clear thinking about U.S. energy policy.
  • Energy Insecurity

    By John Harpole, President of Mercator Energy LLC
    I was not trying to embarrass the Governor. It was not meant to be a trick question. Rather, it was a simple question that most politicians would shrug off with a predetermined in-the-can answer.

    The scene was the Colorado Oil and Gas Association’s Annual Luncheon held last November at the Brown Palace. After a brief 15 minute talk, Gov. Ritter was brave enough to solicit questions from what he knew was a less than adoring audience. As he scanned the room of over 500 people, no one raised their hand. So I did, I asked the question.
  • Congress Gets into Your Bedroom - How the Energy Bill Kills the Bulb, but Saves the Bug

    By Bob Beauprez
    The Energy Bill signed into law last month provides yet another example of the twisted irony that is far too easy to find in the stuff that comes out of Congress. This time Big Brother has gotten into your bedroom.
  • Energy: Congress has got it backwards

    By Bob Beauprez
    There's a popularly held belief out there that if America were to just walk into the public policy confessional and ask forgiveness from our addiction to oil and simultaneously pledge allegiance to "the new way" -- when we walk out all would be right with the world. Nice myth, but reality just isn't that way.
  • What to do with the Roan Plateau?

    By Bob Beauprez
    Evidence of how different people can have the same facts but come to opposite conclusions appeared Tuesday morning, June 12, in the Rocky Mountain News and the Denver Post. The Rocky basically says "Enough already! Get on with it." The Post thinks we need to study it more and supports further delaying permitting.
  • The Energy behind Energy

    By Bob Beauprez
    The world relies on fossil fuels – oil primarily – to support our lifestyle and economic opportunity. Demand for energy by the rapidly expanding economies of India and China, which include over eight times the population of the U.S. and 1/3 of the world’s total, have strained the global supply and driven up prices – and that will almost certainly continue. Massive amounts of the world’s current oil supply and remaining reserves are either under the umbrella or threat of radical Islam regimes or in the hands of anti-America fanatics like Hugo Chavez in Venezuela.
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