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What’s Missing from the New Clean Energy Agenda?
Nuclear power, biofuels, clean coal: These are the Obama administration’s answers to climate change. The 2011 budget, released this week, promised new loans for the construction of nuclear power plants, and on Wednesday the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), White House, and other departments detailed steps to encourage ethanol and clean coal production.
These initiatives may garner support from conservatives, but their ascendancy comes at a price. Support for renewable fuel sources, like wind and solar, has dwindled. President Barack Obama did encourage Senate Democrats to pass a climate change bill, but some moderates are bucking the cap-and-trade provisions that could tamp down carbon emissions. Those moderates are pushing for legislation that leaves carbon caps out entirely.
It hasn’t been a good week for climate advocates. On top of the Obama administration’s overtures to crusty, old energy industries, Rajendra Pachauri, the chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), has had to fend off pressure to resign. The IPCC published a report with a badly sourced fact about the rate at which Himalayan glaciers are melting, and when scientists pointed out the error, Pachauri would not cop to the mistake. (If you missed the beginning of this to-do, Mother Jones‘ Kate Sheppard covered the controversy back in January.)
Given this country’s weak efforts to tamp down carbon emissions, though, perhaps the IPCC’s prediction that those glaciers likely will disappeared by 2035 will turn out to be accurate.
New nuclear plants—but at what cost?
Obama’s budget, as Sheppard reports at Mother Jones, is upping funding for nuclear plant development, even though previous nuclear projects have run wildly over budget. The president has always supported increased nuclear production. As an Illinois Senator, Obama had Exelon Corporation, the country’s largest nuclear operator, in his constituency. The company continued to support him as a presidential candidate. The proposed funding runs in the neighborhood of $54.5 billion in loan guarantees for nuclear projects. That’s good news for an industry that’s in need of cash. As Sheppard explains, without governmental backing, these plants would have little chance of being built.
“Even as public opinion toward nuclear power has warmed, projected construction costs for new plants have soared, with a single reactor now estimated to cost as much as $12 billion,” she writes. “In fact, the outlook for nuclear plants looks so dire that even Wall Street banks have balked at financing them unless the government underwrites the deal.”
The Obama administration is also backing research into nuclear waste disposal, a prerequisite for nuclear expansion. No matter how “green” nuclear energy production might be, so far there’s no safe, sustainable way to deal with its by-products. Finding a long-term solution for nuclear waste disposal will not come cheaply.
Biofuels move us backwards
The administration’s support for biofuels was bigger slap in the face to environmentalists, though. Just a few years ago, ethanol made from corn or switchgrass ranked high on the list of renewable fuels that could spring America from its Middle East oil addiction. In practice, however, biofuels have proven more environmentally destructive and less efficient than advocates had hoped. With farmers in the Midwest knee-deep in corn marked for ethanol production, though, backing away from biofuels is politically dicey.
The consequences are more than political, however. At Grist, Tom Philpott argues that support for biofuels will ultimately drive global carbon emission up, rather than down.
“As ethanol factories continue sucking in more and more corn, plantation owners in places like Brazil and Argentina will put more grassland and even rainforest under the plow to make up for the shortfall, resulting in huge carbon emissions,” Philpott writes. “That dire effect of our ethanol program, known as indirect land-use change, likely nullifies any scant climate benefits from ethanol.”
It’s not just corn and switchgrass that pose a problem, either. As Gina Marie Cheeseman reports at Care2, algae farms, another potential source of biofuel, face their own challenges. Algae demands high energy input and could release more carbon dioxide emissions that it would save, according to a new report from the University of Virginia.
There’s more research to be done before writing algae energy production off, however. In January, the Department of Energy said it would sink $44 million into work on algae pools. Industry players like ExxonMobile are also underwriting research on the subject, Cheeseman writes.
No room for innovation
Moving towards energy sources like nuclear power and ethanol does take the country a step closer to responsible energy production. But right now, the Obama administration is not leaving room for new or ambitious ideas that could do more. Wind and solar, which would form the best foundation for a sustainable energy future, have few advocates in Congress. They also seem to have no role in the near-term energy plan.
Ethanol was the Midwest’s first green industry, for instance, but there are other possibilities for juicing up the region’s clean energy production. In The Nation, Lisa Margonelli lays out the case for “gray power,” which is recycled energy produced by the old, dirty smokestacks that ring cities like Cleveland.
In this vision, twentieth century industry can produce twenty-first century energy. Waste energy, Margonelli argues, “can be profitably “recycled” onto the grid to create power as clean as that from solar and wind but far cheaper.”
“In fact, energy now lost as steam and gases by the region’s manufacturing plants, as well as municipal and agricultural waste, could create as much energy as sixty-nine nuclear power plants, according to figures commissioned by the Environmental Protection Agency,” she says. “This power could strengthen the region’s electrical grid and preserve jobs by making local manufacturing plants more economically stable, while making the region a leader in greener technology.”
A project like Margonelli imagines, however, would require significant commitment and vision from the federal government, both of which are lacking right now.
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16 Comments so far
Show All"What’s Missing from the New Clean Energy Agenda?"
You mean other than making the billions of dollars in government payoffs/bribes in both directions to and from the oil and energy sector widespread public knowledge, and acknowledging the stranglehold the energy industry has on public policy, especially public health and the environment?
I would hazard a guess that, oh, CLEAN ENERGY itself is missing from the equation.
Unlike many American workers, Obama isn't underemployed, he is gunning for the corporations full time.
His advisors are people who should be telling him how pathetic his policy is. Energy and environment are two areas where he actually picked people without big business and banking agendas.
So Sad
Coal and nuclear I agree with the author on but not biofuels. Do a google search on switchgrass and corn. Switchgrass ethanol will still need oil but it uses 540% less and yields very well.
I don't expect government to subsidize solar panels and wind turbines. We need to turn to corporations that will get into those technologies and support them only if they're public.
With solutions like this, clean coal nukes, etc, we know we are lost...
UNLESS WE FIGHT TOOTH AND NAIL!!!!
Organize... which means I have to get out there and gather up as many people as I can possibly muster up to march around our little town, make a big stink and push others to do the same. The marches do not have to happen on the same day. But if there are many small large marches all over the nation, everyday for a long period of time, along with those who are willing to put their freedom on the line, like blocking coal mining etc, or the breaking ground for new nuke plants, then this will bring about the playing field that would allow for a real debate for or against. I've got to get to work.
Nuclear subsidization is bad enough, they want the Government
to protect them from responsibility in case of failure.
Barry belongs to Corporate America. Elections of 2010 cannot come fast enough..With the republicans at least we know who
the devil is. Forget Move-on and let's move out of the Democratic party.
Obama can't wait until the Republicans take control of Congress after the 2010 elections. Obamabots will send him more money than ever while the Republicans hastily scuttle Obama's token populist policies that he doesn't want passed anyway.
Simple idea: Our town pays 50 cents per day to the local utility per lightpole, part of which is federally subsidized. Put a solar panel atop EVERY ONE. 100% fed subsidized. Eliminating these electricity costs frees local money for other starved priorities.
But the local utility loses out. They need a new source of revenue, or their bonds-holders scream. And fund nutty right wing groups... So they ask for rate increases to cover their lost revenue, so every customer pays the lost revenue, and then the customers start to scream (certainly those on a fixed income, with lots of spare time to scream).
So it's a problem: any ideas on how to replace that lost revenue for the local utility? Without some tactic, then common-sense, feasible practical ideas to reduce offsite energy production (renewables) runs into natural political opposition.
The jobs side is easy. But it's the bondholders & ratepayers who will scream. What is the answer to them?
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
No mention of new geothermal technology. There is no serious large-scale commitment to wind and solar in the regressive U.S. because while these systems produce clean, cheap energy the big energy companies don't want to see a nation of small land owners generating surplus energy back into a modernized grid and getting paid for it--so they, and their media and political class echo chamber pretend those renewables are irrelevant. A system such as Germany's where the government subsidizes the investments of land owners in wind and solar arrays and has a modernized electricity grid capable of efficiently buying and distributing surplus electricity would be true energy progressive populism which is an anathema in America. American energy entrepreneurs had to go to Denmark to find a government that would invest in their plan to build a national system of electrical car recharging stations powered by clean wind power. China, India, the EU and Japan are leaving the U.S. in the dust in terms of R&D and scheduled development of renewable energy systems.
BTW, you know why the Tea Bagger movement isn't a true populist movement? Because they don't have any populist energy policy ideas. They are hard-core slash, burn, mine & drill all the way and most of them have nothing but contempt for global warming, biodiversity and what's left of the natural environment. Too many religious fanatic nut-jobs and scientific illiterates.
What's missing? How about removal of subsidies for oil, coal, and nuclear? We might not need anything else.
Hey what are you, a free marketeer? :)
But really - good idea cassandra.
Joe
The Margonelli piece in The Nation is really important. I'm associated with Recycled Energy Development (recycled-energy.com), the company that she cites for some of the data in her article. The federal government would need to have some vision to make more "gray power" happen, but it doesn't need as much commitment as one might think. It would not, for instance, have to cost taxpayers money. Right now, a number of regulations protect electric utilities from competition, thereby leading to a highly inefficient energy system. If we took away some of these protections, plenty of companies would want to undertake measures that are simultaneously pro-profit and pro-planet. Sure, their motive would be the profit side, but who cares? The environmental potential is massive.
Please Please stop lumping all biofuels together!!!! While this article is well meaning, and somewhat on the mark...there IS a truly viable renewable fuel that exists, and it's called SUSTAINABLE BIODIESEL!
I'm not talking about soy based biodiesel, and ethanol has nothing to do with biodiesel, except that they have traditionally been lumped together. I have the same issues as everyone else about ethanol, and think it makes no sense at all.
Sustainable biodiesel....FOOD FIRST Biodiesel, can and should be the "norm."
It is so simple to take used oils that will be sent to landfills or worse...added to other food sources, and create a fuel that was literally the fuel that Rudolph Diesel designed the diesel engine to run on.
PLEASE stop making this mistake...it sets us all back immensely, by creating an incorrect logic that moves us away from our shared SUSTAINABLE future!
Remember...FOOD FIRST & Renewable does NOT mean SUSTAINABLE!!!
For more info go to: www.fuelresponsibly.org
I went to the website and found it started multiple sessions that froze my computer. It showed up half a dozen times on the task manager and could not be stopped.
So without reading this site I have to rely on common sense. Re-using oil is not a bad idea, but waste cooking oil is small in volume. Burning any oil, whether it is Esso or Crisco, puts carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
We must develop and perfect wind and solar technologies, or other technologies based on the constant motions of the earth and the oceans and the heat differentials of nature. Recapture of waste heat is sensible as well, although secondary by its very nature.
Joe
The reason wind and solar aren't getting support it because you don't need a big utility when you have solar on your roof.
There just aren't enough big solar or wind farm hiring lobbyists in D.C. What few big solar or wind farms are being built are just trying to overcome their $/Kwh deficiencies.
If you really want to make a difference, buy enough solar to get yourself net neutral to the grid. Your utility will have to cut back on purchases of coal/nuke/NG-sourced energy. Initially that won't cause bond-holders any grief. Lower COGS, same rate, just lower volume. Revenues go down gradually. When the utility wants to institute a rate hike, fine. That reduces the $/Kwh deficit of solar, so more people will put solar on their roofs. Onward the cycle could repeat itself until solar was cost effective at which point the utility is just there for your overnight power needs (assuming fuel cells aren't yet feasible for this in 20y).
Look at it this way. Has anyone who put solar on their roofs in the 70s-80s NOT recouped all of their initial investment many times over? The coming inflation alone means the pay-off time for today's investment will be shorter than expected.
Hell, the Costco in Dallas is selling a stand-alone solar kit now. Really just a 60w panel with a cheap car-type inverter so you can charge a cell phone or something stupid after the next Katrina-type event. Overpriced, but the point is solar is being made stupid-simple.
The utilities and established big-business interests (and by proxy D.C) do not want this. They can't control it, they can't get on-going revenue from it, so they want to kill it.
I'm thinking Dave Ramsey has the right idea on D.C., every incumbent must go. You may think you like your representative but they really are part of the problem too. They'll grand-stand in the local paper, put out some good press releases then stab the average American in the back when their campaign-funding lobbyist says that some certain amendment is a good one (hint, hint Congressman/Senator).
The 2 political parties are corrupt, and completely broken. The "tea party" movement started with righteous American frustration but has been co-opted by the Republican. Follow the money! The "tea party" event happening right now is all about the money!
Support that down-ticket candidate, and support ranked-choice voting. That's how we'll fix America.
What's missing is a clean energy agenda.
Trying to find a way for large companies to harness and exploit the environmental movement does not equal or approximate trying to solve environmental problems.
What is important in seeing this clearly is to remember that in dealing with the 0bama administration and both sides of both houses of Congrefs, environmentally concerned citizens and groups deal with a force loyal to corporate profits, a force that will lie and break whatever promise it can to preserve corporate profits at whatever sacrifice to human well being the wealthy find convenient.
Therefore, clean energy is not the agenda of Congrefs or the administration, and any "clean energy agenda" is overwhelmingly a concoction oflies.
Other groups need to withhold cooperation in ways that render such psychopathy unprofitable.