It's
a Syn 1/5/08 3:35 PM
http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=8280
Page 1 of 2
It's
a Syn
by
Jerry Taylor and Peter Van Doren
This
article appeared in the National Review on June 11, 2007.
Soaring gasoline prices are
prompting politicians on both sides of the aisle to contemplate a reŠembrace of
one of the worst financial boondoggles of
the
1970s Ń synthetic fuels. Of course, the coal industry is smart enough to
rebrand this technology, so the new term of art is "coalŠtoŠliquids."
While
turning
coal into oil (and then into gasoline) would be a wonderful idea if it could be
done cost effectively, it can't Ń which is why the coal industry is
banging
on the federal door for lavish taxpayer subsidies. The fact that these
proposals are being seriously entertained in Washington speaks volumes
about
why politicians should be kept as far away from the energy business as
possible.
Should
Congress go down this road again, it would represent the fourth federal effort
to jumpŠstart the industry with taxpayer money. If past is
prologue,
it will fail yet again.
The
first effort began in 1944 with the "Synthetic Liquid Fuels Act,"
which authorized the construction of a host of federal coalŠtoŠliquids
demonstration
plants. The New York Times reported that "The next ten years will see the
rise of a massive new industry which will free us from
dependence
on foreign sources of oil. Gasoline will be produced from coal, air, and
water." By August 1949, the federal Bureau of Mines was reporting
that
coalŠtoŠliquids technology was, in theory, economically competitive with
conventional gasoline, a claim that the bureau made again in a massive
report
issued in 1951.
What
the federal demonstration plants actually "demonstrated," however,
was that coalŠtoŠliquid technology wasn't nearly as economically viable as
advertised.
When budgetŠcutting Republicans swept into Washington after the 1952 elections,
the synfuels program was one of the first things to go.
The
second effort came in 1960 with the Coal Research and Development Act.
Originally adopted as a measure to propŠup the depressed coal sector,
the
law established the Office of Coal Research and funded the construction of six
synthetic fuels demonstration plants. The most notorious of these was
"Project
Gasoline," a coalŠtoŠliquids facility in Cresap, West Virginia under the
protection of Ń you guessed it Ń Senator Robert Byrd (D., W.V.).
Although
the feds alleged that the Cresap plant would produce gasoline at eleven cents
per gallon, construction delays, and cost overruns prevented the
facility
from ever coming fully onŠline. Project Gasoline was quietly terminated in
April, 1970.
The
third and most ambitious effort was launched as a consequence of the 1973 oil
embargo. Appropriations for coalŠtoŠliquids programs increased 19Š
fold
from 1970Š1978. Three new federal coalŠtoŠliquids demonstration plants were
started, Robert Byrd's Cresap facility was brought back onŠline, and
President
Ford promised that one million barrels of oil a day would come from coal by
1985.
Alas,
the industry disappointed yet again, so when the 1979 oilŠprice shock hit, a
frustrated Congress passed the 1980 Energy Security Act. Among
other
things, the law authorized a staggering $17 billion to fund the notorious
Synthetic Fuels Corporation (SFC), a publicŠprivate entity charged with
producing
500,000 barrels of oil per day by 1987. Another $68 billion was promised four
years hence once the SFC submitted a "comprehensive
strategy"
to meet that target. The government actually talked about pressing the nation's
entire construction industry into a crash program to build the
envisioned
fuel plants.
By
the time the first $100 million of taxpayer funds went out the door, however,
all but two SFC projects (none coalŠtoŠliquid) were stillŠborne or
cancelled
due to yet more cost overruns and technical problems. The Synthetic Fuels
Corporation was shut down in 1985 before it could spend any
more.
As
economists Linda Cohen and Roger Noll later observed, "The entire synfuels
program had a quality of madness to it. Project after project failed.
Cost
estimates were connected to the price of substitutes rather than to the program
itself. Goals were unattainable from the start. Official costŠbenefit
studies
estimate net benefits in the minus of billions of dollars. Even apart from the
Synthetic Fuels Corporation, the dogged continuation of the
research
and development program seems incredible."
After
three bad fiscal marriages between the taxpayer and the coalŠtoŠliquids
industry, one would think that the madness of this political love affair
would
safely be a thing of the past. Alas, the "audacity of hope" marches
on. Presidential candidate Barack Obama is talkingŠup the most ambitious set
of
coalŠtoŠliquid subsidies yet, while Republican presidential candidate John
McCain promises another ambitious round of federal demonstration plants
and
liberal doses of "canŠdo" attitude in the Oval Office. Virtually
every politician in Washington has his or her own twist on how to use taxpayer
money
to subsidize coal companies for the public good, fulminations about
"corporate welfare" notwithstanding.
If
the definition of insanity is doing something over and over again with the
constant expectation of a different result, then you know all you need to
know
about Washington in 2007.
It's
a Syn 1/5/08 3:35 PM
http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=8280
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