The David Knight Show - INTERVIEW How Do "Green" Regulations INCREASE Energy Use (and Costs)
Episode Date: January 9, 2025Todd Myers, Vice President for Research Washington Policy Center Washington state's regulations have been counter-productive by their own measurement over the last decade of reporting. It's so bad t...hat they have failed to report as required by law. What can we learn that applies to EVERY STATE and EVERY REGULATORY ISSUETodd Myers, author of "Time to Think Small: How Nimble Environmental Technologies Can Solve the Planet's Biggest Problems"If you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-show Or you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7 Money should have intrinsic value AND transactional privacy: Go to DavidKnight.gold for great deals on physical gold/silver For 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to TrendsJournal.com and enter the code KNIGHTBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome back.
Joining us now is Todd Myers.
We've talked to Todd before.
He's with a think tank, a policy institute in Washington State.
He's vice president for research at the Washington Policy Center, and this is in Washington State.
Thank you for joining us, sir.
Yeah, it's always nice to chat with you.
Great to have you on.
I saw your press release about what is happening in Washington State with CO2 emissions.
Tell us a little bit about what is happening there in terms of their emissions actually going up.
And I don't think that everything is melting there in Washington yet, is it?
It's actually spilling outside my window right now.
Even though
the CO2 emissions went up. So tell us
what's happening in Washington
with Washington State
with their measuring of
emissions. They've gone up over
a 10-year period, I guess, a
9-year period, 2012 to 2021.
So
for those not in Washington state are probably wondering why,
why do I care about Washington state's CO2 emissions? And the answer is, is that Washington
and the West Coast has seen itself as a leader on climate change. You know, say, oh, here are
the policies that we need to implement to reduce the risk from CO2 emissions and climate change. Our governor, Governor Inslee,
actually ran for president, albeit briefly, in 2019 on the platform of addressing climate change.
And his whole argument was that he was going to bring the policies that we've had in Washington
State to the federal level to fight climate change. And we constantly call ourselves a leader.
So across the country, these are the
kinds of policies that are in Washington state that, you know, many, particularly on the left,
want to implement. And what is notable is, is that they simply have failed to achieve their goal.
A lot of focus is on, you know, the cost of the CO2 policies and climate change and things like
that. But the simple fact is they don't work. And so Washington State this week released CO2 data through 2021. And so when you look at 2012,
which was just before Governor Inslee took office through 2021, the ninth year of his administration,
CO2 emissions actually increased 5% over that period of time. And that's after COVID. So, you know, considering that even
COVID couldn't cause the emissions to go down, it's pretty remarkable. During that same time,
the United States' CO2 emissions went down. And so the message for people who aren't in Washington
State is these policies simply don't work. And if you care about CO2 emissions, if you care about
the risk from climate change, don't do what Washington state has done.
Look for more innovative ways that put people, not politicians, in charge.
Yeah, and when we look at all this stuff in terms of CO2, we've got the Paris Climate Accord, which is hanging over everybody's head.
China is putting in two power plants, coal power plants a week.
And supposedly it's not a problem if the stuff comes from China.
But the same CO2, if it's emitted in the United States or in Europe or other places like that, oh, it's going to kill us all. To me, that is the key thing about this.
And it's kind of interesting that even in some of the places where they have scrupulously tried to reduce CO2, it's actually gone up.
And it hasn't been a catastrophe either, has it?
Yeah, and I think that the challenge is, is that the exaggeration and sort of dishonesty has made it so that people simply write off climate change as an issue.
You know, there have been so much exaggeration
about the impact, about the harm,
and that sort of thing,
that people get very tired of it.
We do know that CO2 does trap heat to some extent,
and there is some risk,
but the problem is the exaggeration
makes people sort of roll their eyes.
And then when you see the policies
that cost a lot, raise energy prices, make things more expensive, exaggeration makes people to sort of roll their eyes. And then when you see the policies that
cost a lot, raise energy prices, make things more expensive, and then don't work,
the natural reaction of people is to say this whole thing is a farce. This whole thing
is about ideology. And, you know, it's hard to disagree in a lot of cases because,
you know, even Al Gore, when he won the Nobel Prize for his work on
climate change, said that climate change is an excuse to do things we should be doing anyway,
right? So he said, you know, it's a good way to implement our ideology. And that's what you see
in Washington State. But I think that for those on the center right, like myself, we do need to recognize that there are
things that we're doing to impact ecosystems or to wildlife and things like that. And if you look,
and what I always point out to people is look at a map, look at where nature is and look at where
conservative voters are. They are overlapped. Conservatives live surrounded by the environment
because they love it and they want to be good stewards. But what the failure of Washington state shows is that top-down political policies fail and bottom-up efforts to save energy, to save money, too, are a much better way to be good stewards of the planet.
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
I talked this week about the classic case at the turn of the century we're in big cities like new
york or seattle or london they had so much horse manure and horse urine that were accumulating in
the streets and it's like and what saved that was it a government designed program that dictated
solutions to people or was it a free market where people got to try things and of course you're
talking about this from the standpoint of was State. And you said, how does this affect everybody else?
You know, it's the federalism that we have, the fact that different states can try different things.
And the beauty of that is that we can see what works.
But the beauty of it is we can also see what does not work.
And I guess Washington State falls into the latter category.
Tell us a little bit about some of these regulations. What have they done in Washington State that is in terms of, you know, forcing people to do this or that,
that hasn't really even accomplished their metric by their own paradigm?
What kind of regulations have you been seeing there in Washington State over this 10-year period?
Well, there's a few things, and I'll give you two examples.
One, we have lots of building regulations that force buildings to be what are called
green buildings.
And in fact, years ago, we implemented a law that required all school buildings to meet
what are called green building standards.
And so I started looking at these green buildings and these green schools to see if they were
in fact saving money. And what I found was, is that green schools that meet these standards actually use
more energy per square foot than the non-green schools in those same school districts for a
variety of reasons. And you see this with buildings. There has been research that in Seattle, green buildings actually do worse than almost anywhere else.
So one of the things was is that these very restrictive building standards about what you had to build.
Seattle and King County, where Seattle is, is one of the most expensive places to live in the United States.
We have a housing shortage. we have very high prices. And it's because we've added a lot of these regulations,
so-called green regulations that have ended up failing.
Let me give you one more example.
The number one source of CO2 emissions
in Washington state is transportation.
So the governor and others have said,
oh, well, what we need to do is to build a lot
of electric vehicle charging stations.
But many of those charging stations sit unused because where people tend to charge up is at home. And if they are out and they see a charging station, they will plug in.
But they're not very useful in terms of actually keeping your vehicle charged.
And, you know, if you're in the store,
you don't get much of a charge while you're there.
So it doesn't help,
it doesn't do much to actually help reduce CO2 emissions or help people who have electric vehicles.
And the result is we spend millions,
tens of millions of dollars
on electric vehicle charging stations
that sit there and do nothing.
That's just a waste of
money. And so people focus on that as a waste of taxpayer dollars, which it certainly is,
but it's also a waste of opportunity to do good things for the planet. There are lots of projects
that we actually could do to make it energy more efficient. We're fighting, I used to work with
salmon recovery. We have very low populations of salmon. There's things we can do there.
So if you waste money on useless EV charging stations, rather than doing projects that help salmon, you are harming the environment by misallocating resources, in addition to wasting tax payroll.
And, of course, what we're seeing with all this stuff is that they will come up with one solution, like an electric battery car, right?
And they will, you know, not? And they will subsidize that heavily.
They will shut down any other competition. And even if it is something like another form of
electric car, let's say a fuel cell car or a hydrogen car, even if it's something that could
also be zero emission, no, no, no. We've got this one solution, and you're going to do that. That's
something that we see from the government all the time but i want to step back and when we
talk about the schools and how the ones that were green schools and they gave them regulations about
how they wanted to build them and that type of thing how what was it that caused um what types
of things were they having these schools do that caused them to use more energy than other schools that didn't follow
this this green building regulation scheme yeah people are always when i mentioned that they're
always flabbergasted that you could make a green building and make it actually worse than the
existing buildings several things that they did one is i never understood this but they repeated
it again and again which is they said well we're going to have big windows because big windows allow in more light. And therefore you have, you need fewer lighting
fixtures and that will save electricity. Well, LED light bulbs are extremely efficient, very low
energy, put out a lot of light. And so there's just not very much energy to be saved by reducing
that amount of light. However, windows are not very efficient, right?
They let a lot of heat in.
They let a lot of, you know, cold in as well, right?
When during the summer it's hot or in the winter it's cold.
And so you have to constantly run the HVAC to keep that room a normal temperature.
The other thing that, and that more than offsets any, you know, energy savings you get from
light.
The other thing that they do is they say, well want clean air we want fresh air so what they do
is they have requirements to have to recirculate the air to pull the old air out put new air in
and what do you got to do you've got to heat that you've got to cool that whatever and so they're
constantly running the hvac's and so i talked with several facilities directors not just in
washington state but across the country where these were. And they just said, in order to build a green
school, we would actually have to increase the size of the HVAC system to meet these new
requirements. But I want to address your point about the one size fits all. That's the fundamental
problem with government programs, or I shouldn't say the fundamental, a fundamental problem, which is that there is one size.
And if it doesn't work, then you've lost time. We need a diversity of efforts.
So, you know, I would be a horrible book author if I didn't mention my book, Time to Think Small, which focuses on exactly this issue, which is lots of small efforts and a diversity of efforts are better ways to find not only solutions that work,
but solutions that fit people's lives rather than have government impose restrictions on people that make their lives more difficult.
The diversity of solutions, especially with technology, allows them to find ways to save energy, save money,
do things that fit their lifestyle, make their life better,
while also making the planet better. And so I think that's the real key is that we need a
diversity of things. What I'm hoping is, is that, you know, during the upcoming Trump administration,
rather than just simply saying all of these environmental, you know, that this focus is
ridiculous to say, we need a new approach. We need a diversified approach, federalism, local power, rather than top-down government
power to show that this way works better than the one-size-fits-all government approach.
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
When we're talking about federalism and the fact that, you know, we can see what works
and what doesn't work based on different states and everything.
And unfortunately, there's this idea that has taken hold in America across a political
spectrum.
It doesn't seem to me to matter whether people on the left or the right, Republican, Democrat,
everybody thinks that a solution needs to come from Washington.
And one of the results of that is that we get this one size fits all.
We're going to have a dictated solution, and that's the way this is going to work.
And we need to be able to experiment to find
out uh what works and what doesn't work that that's a key thing um you know it's kind of
interesting and you address this in your press release the fact that the most recent data that
they just released is 2021 why why is that uh if this is something is such a high priority for them
why aren't they uh maybe it's because it's not working they don't
want people looking at why are they three years behind and all this stuff so another problem with
i mean more evidence this is i think more evidence that simply bureaucracy is not up to the task
certainly of addressing environmental issues as well as other issues and the fact that here we
are in 2025 and the most recent data we have for
washington state co2 emissions is 2021. interestingly that is actually in violation of state law
state law says that by the end of even numbered years like 2024 they are to release emissions data
for the preceding two years which would have been 2022 and 2023. So I pointed this out and said that the state is actually in
violation of its own law and being two years behind. And the problem with that is, is that
2021 data is useless if you are a policymaker and trying to figure out what works and what doesn't,
because you can say, oh, and what they do say is, oh, yes, we didn't meet those targets,
but the policies we adopted after that are working.
Well, it's like, well, how do you know? You don't have any data. You're just making it up.
And so when I pointed this out, that they were in violation of their law, that
the governor's press secretary sent out a snarky email saying, you know, what Todd doesn't
understand is how difficult it is to gather this information. Well, exactly.
Government doesn't have the capacity to get the information and to do the job
in a way that will work.
That's what they are admitting is like,
look, we can't do this.
The other irony is,
is that we actually have very onerous restrictions
in Washington state about electric vehicles.
You can't basically sell a recreational vehicle or a semi in Washington state about electric vehicles. You can't basically sell a recreational
vehicle or a semi in Washington state because there aren't enough electric vehicles to sell
because you have to sell a certain percentage of that. So we stopped. So the argument has been to
the same agency who put these numbers out, look, we would like to comply. We can't. It's physically
not possible to comply.
And the response of the agency is, sorry, that's the law. So, you know, when it's other people,
it's the law that you have to follow. When it's them, they whine about the fact that it's not possible for them to actually comply with the law. And I think that just shows you that, you know,
how incapable bureaucracy is of addressing these serious challenges, but also how their own image
is more important than actually reducing CO2 emissions. As much as they talk about it's an
existential crisis, when the choice is between admitting failure and saying, yes, we need to do
better, or making excuses, they make excuses to save their own image.
And that's something that we see all the time.
You know, I talk about the fact that, you know, when you look at, let's say, a command
control economies, socialism, you know, look at East Germany versus West Germany or North
Korea versus South Korea.
Why is it that they don't have any goods in the stores?
Well, they don't really because they don't have a market system.
Even if you had the smartest people in control, and we know that's not what happens.
Even if you had the smartest people in control, they don't have sufficient information to be able to make decisions about what is going to work the best.
That's what a marketplace does.
And so, as you point out, they're making this confession that, yeah, it's not possible for us to get all this information together.
It's not possible for them to get enough information together to make an intelligent decision.
That's what the whole free market is about, everybody, and that's what your book is about
as well.
You know, getting small and pulling back instead of having central planning and dictates and
mandates and bans that are being put on all kinds of things.
And I imagine you probably have that as well.
I mean, we're looking at Biden going out the door,
banning hot water heaters and other things like that.
I'm sure you guys were way ahead of that, right, at the state level.
Yes.
In fact, we just, in Washington State, the state tried to ban natural gas hookups,
not just the heaters, not just the stoves or anything like that, but actually running natural gas to new homes. They tried to ban natural gas hookups, not just the heaters, not just the stoves or anything like that,
but actually running natural gas to new homes.
They tried to ban it.
The voters overturned that in this last election because they recognized that it was so, excuse me, extreme.
Yeah, and we've seen that in the UK as well.
You know, they've done the same thing there.
They want to ban natural gas and stuff.
And, you know, heat pump in a really cold climate like you've got in Washington State or like they've got in the U.K., heat pumps just don't make it, handle it very well during the winter.
And so, but they don't care.
And they want to, in the U.K., they even want to remove the existing infrastructure.
I mean, they want to rewild is one of the terms that they've used.
They want to rewild is one of the terms that they've used they want to rewild um the infrastructure that's been built in other words you know just just take
everything back down to um to nothing that's what you're seeing everywhere yeah well in fact you
mentioned heat pumps so i live in the mountains and we have a heat pump well last january it was
negative 10 where i was fortunately i have a propane backup Fortunately, I have a propane backup. And so I have a propane
tank that when it gets that low, that we can heat our house because the heat pump when it gets,
you know, in the teens and certainly negative temperatures, it doesn't work. I also have a
smart thermostat and my smart thermostat would come up and say, we think that your heat pump
is broken because it's just turning and not generating any heat and i was like that yes because it's negative 10. and so that i think is the challenge of these
one-size-fits-all approaches but you made a really good point about local control and i think there's
two things one is is that you need to have the information distant bureaucrats simply don't have
the information necessary to make those good decisions because it's not in front of them and everybody's circumstances are a little bit different
the second thing is is that you need accountability so that when something goes wrong or when it goes
right you get that feedback when you fail you say okay we got to change bureaucrats don't have that
feedback they don't have that accountability there's a fantastic example here in washington state so the quinault tribe which is out on the coast had been has these beautiful forests but
the bureau of indian affairs had been doing all of the timber harvesting on the land on behalf of the
tribe and what did they do they cut clear- cut massive areas and then left slash on the ground.
They said, don't worry, it will decompose and trees will regrow between them. But what they
didn't realize was that cedar has a chemical in it that slows decomposition. So what was left was
these massive areas where there was just all of this timber slash and no regrowth at all for
decades literally for decades so the tribe said look why don't we take over the forestry on our
own land because they were the ones who are paying the price they lived there not the bia right the
bia was making decisions from washington dc they took it over. And what was the first thing they did?
They forested.
They removed the slash.
And they started harvest rotations that were sustainable that would bring back those forests.
Now, critically, they harvested for revenue.
They want that money because they recognize that it's a valuable resource.
And they use it to fund part of the tribe's budget.
So they didn't just, you know,
leave the trees, but they were better stewards because they had the information about how cedar
worked as opposed to other trees. And then they also had the accountability. And my favorite part
of the story was, is that when the tribe took over forestry in the early 2000s, completely from the
BIA, the BIA said, the BIA had been harvesting
without any environmental assessments at all.
They just said, well, we have a general plan, go harvest.
And the tribe took over.
The BIA said, you have to do environmental assessments.
You can imagine the tribe's reaction when they said,
you haven't been doing it, but we have to.
And the BIA said, yes.
I think that's the arrogance sometimes of government overseeing
and in this case i mean really treating the tribe badly who had been doing a better job than the bia
accountability is just so much better for the environment oh yeah i i guess my question is um
do they have some special status that we don't have that they could take back control from this
bureaucracy because that's the biggest problem we can't get control back from these bureaucracies
that are doing a bad job. How did they get it back? Was it because of their
status as Indians? Yeah, it was because they have
sovereignty. Now, what sovereignty means on
tribal lands is sort of interesting because the BIA is supposed
to hold the land in trust and
manage it for the benefit of the tribes. It's an incredibly paternalistic system, I think. But
as the point that you make is that in the tribes, they have the opportunity to do that. They can at
least make an argument that they are sovereign and can do that. You and I, we can't say, hey, we would rather have control.
Let us figure a way to be better stewards.
You know, the federal and state agencies don't do that for us.
So I think it's funny because I've started studying tribal stewardship of natural resources for this very reason,
which is that they have more control.
And I think that in many ways they provide a really good model for how we should
care for natural resources because they have that local control, local knowledge, and the
accountability. And when it comes from forests, fisheries, wildlife habitat, wildlife management,
they do a better job. I'll give you one more fun example, which is in Washington State,
the wolf is considered a threatened species. But on the Colville Res example, which is that in Washington state, the wolf is considered a threatened species, but on the Colville reservation, which is right in the area where the wolves are,
they consider the wolf recovered because the populations are very high and they actually
hand out hunting permits. That's the tribe. So when they have authority and when it affects them,
they can say, look, we're using the information we have. We have the accountability. We have the
control to do a better job than the sort of bureaucratic systems from the
government.
Well, that's interesting, you know, and but part of it is and again, it is the status
of the Indians.
But regular Americans have sovereignty that they're not using as well.
And I think that they need to start using the 10th Amendment and some of these other
things, because federal policy, especially when you talk about forests, and we were talking about that earlier in the program with the fires that are happening in L.A., seen it over and over again.
Poor forestry management because they're not doing stewardship anymore.
They're doing environmentalism, and it's kind of just don't touch anything type of thing rather than actually doing stewardship.
And it has been disastrous for the last 50 years, and it's getting worse all the time.
And so I think everybody needs to start getting together and seeing how we're going to increase
our sovereignty so that we can start addressing some of these problems ourselves.
And of course, that's what your book is focused on, not the political aspect of it,
but the beauty of having smaller local decisions.
Tell us a little bit about your book again.
I know we talked about it last time you were on, and the title of it is?
Time to Think Small, How Nimble Environmental Technology Can Solve the Planet's Biggest Problems.
And there are a lot of folks on the center right who care about the environment,
but are very skeptical about environmental issues because they feel that it's a Trojan horse for policies that they don't like.
And in many cases, as we discussed, it is. But they want to find an alternative that they can support to be, you know, to protect the natural resources.
Like I said, conservatives live around that. The other source that I've had a lot of people say is my college age son or
daughter comes back and lectures me about the environment and why don't we care about the
environment. And so I said, well, give them my book. It'll explain a better way to help the
environment. But what it shows is, is that in the 1970s, when we created the EPA, you didn't have
the technology, you didn't have the control for individuals to make a big
difference in environmental stewardship. That's just simply not true anymore. We now have the
technology, we now have the ability to do really remarkable things to be good stewards of the
environment in ways that bureaucracies fail. And so what we recognize, what we need to recognize is
that we need to change the way that we do environmental stewardship, put the power in the
hands of individuals, peoples, innovative companies, and less in the hands of politicians and bureaucrats
who tend to focus on their own interests rather than the interests of the planet.
And Washington state's failure on reducing CO2 emissions that we saw this week is really just
the perfect example of where an issue that the politicians say is critical an existential
crisis and yet even they fail and then make excuses for that fail rather than saying we need
to find a better way for them it's about political image it should be about for the planet for
conservatives and those on the center right who live near nature every day that's what thinking
small that's what these new technologies that's what these new technologies,
that's what my book is about.
It's about ways to do that that actually live, that help us live the lives the way we want
while being good stewards of the planet.
That's really well said.
And again, the book is Time to Think Small by Todd Myers.
And I guess I can find that at Amazon, anywhere books are sold, right?
Yep, absolutely.
That's great.
Yeah, I've seen that same type of thing.
As a matter of fact, I worked with a guy at a think tank who had been with the EPA.
At the time, he had just retired.
He was with them for about 30 years right after their creation.
And to see that it had kind of changed his whole mission statement.
And the EPA has not really been about pollution anymore.
It's all about the environmentalism.
And so that's what we see with the bureaucracies.
And it's really by design because it allows these people who have to stand for election
to not have any accountability either because they can always push it onto the bureaucracy.
Thank you so much for joining us, Todd Myers.
And again, the book is Time to Think Small
by Todd Myers and he works
there at the Washington Policy Center
thank you all of you and thank you Sandy Hayes
I appreciate that thank you for the tip have a good day
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