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Wyoming Governors Casts Aside Free-Market Principles When Coal is at Stake

 



July 14, 2024 - Wyoming Gov. Mark Gordon is quick to tell the federal government not to interfere with the free market, but he has a hard time taking his own advice.


“Our federal government should not be issuing overreaching mandates that manipulate the free market,” Gordon said when announcing yet another lawsuit du jour against President Joe Biden’s administration. This time, Wyoming has joined a coalition with 25 states to fight fuel-efficiency standards for gasoline-powered vehicles.


Gordon’s tough-talking critique of government mandates is totally at odds with his approach to carbon capture.

 

The governor and state lawmakers have gone to extraordinary lengths to mandate utilities use expensive and unproven carbon capture and sequestration technology to keep the coal industry alive. How is that in line with the state’s cherished free-market principles?


The state is banking on carbon capture to extend the coal industry’s lifespan. But ratepayers will suffer when they have to foot the bill for carbon capture conversion through electric bill hikes. If that’s not government overreach that hurts everyday people and manipulates the free market, what is?


Wyoming’s carbon capture legislation is a Hail Mary pass to “save” an industry rapidly losing its share of the energy market as the need to stop climate change becomes even more critical and competition grows from other energy sources.


The cost of carbon capture research is tremendous, with no guarantee a commercially viable power plant will be built in Wyoming or anywhere else. The state has spent hundreds of millions of dollars from federal infrastructure and COVID-19 relief funds and grants.


Let’s compare the financial and environmental impacts of the state’s carbon capture/coal protection laws to Gordon’s opposition to the fuel-efficiency standards announced last month by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.


The Biden administration’s Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards for light trucks — most sport utility vehicles, pickups and minivans — must produce an overall new model fleet average of 50.4 miles per gallon by model year 2031.


Gordon called the new standards “unworkable” in Wyoming.


“Wyoming residents drive thousands of miles each year through remote areas,” the governor noted. “They should be able to decide what vehicle technology is most suitable for their needs, not the Biden administration.”


One of the major reasons for increasing fuel-efficiency standards for gas-powered vehicles is to drive customers’ demands for more affordable and green EVs from manufacturers and dealers. Obviously, as Gordon charges, the federal government is trying to manipulate the free market.


But the benefits don’t rely on huge expenditures in unproven technology.


The new fuel standards will save billions of dollars in fuel costs, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, plus “prevent more than 710 million metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions by 2050, reduce air pollution, and reduce the country’s dependence on oil.”


But the Gordon administration’s unwillingness to accept federal funds to build EV charging infrastructure — even though the feds will pick up 80% of the tab, with the rest from private businesses — makes no sense. His decision has made Wyoming one of the slowest in the nation to roll out more charging stations.


Wyoming’s hands-off approach has led to little statewide demand for EVs. According to S&P Global Mobility, only 87 EVs were sold in Wyoming in the first quarter of 2024. Only about 1,000 EVs are registered, and there are fewer than 100 charging stations.


“Wyoming has no desire to establish infrastructure that will likely fail,” the state said in its plan for how to spend federal EV-charging funds.


Building a statewide system of EV charging stations will admittedly be a difficult task, even with federal funds, in a state so sparsely populated as Wyoming. I well understand why the state has balked at some of the federal requirements, including that charging stations be placed every 50 miles.


But during a recent trip to Cheyenne, U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg told Wyoming Public Media his agency knows that “a one-size-fits-all approach is not going to work.” He said his department is willing to work with Wyoming officials on a “common sense” solution here.


It would be advantageous for Wyoming to negotiate with the feds on this issue, rather than filing more lawsuits that will only further delay a system the state needs.


Wyoming has a $4.5 billion tourism industry, and even though EVs aren’t yet in much demand here, our economy greatly depends on visits from people in states that have unequivocally embraced electric vehicles. Why would we want them to turn around at our borders and make a beeline to states that provide essential charging services?


Gordon’s “all-of-the-above” approach to energy partnerships, which includes fossil fuels, wind, solar, hydrogen and nuclear power, is missing a key ingredient: more support for battery-powered electric vehicles.


The governor clearly has no appetite for the argument that having more EVs on the road is vital to protect the environment. But he should drop the pretense of fighting EVs because of his supposed faith in free-market principles — which he has violated throughout his carbon capture crusade — and accept the economic benefits they offer with little state investment.