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rox63
http://www.workingforchange.com/article.cfm?itemid=19002

QUOTE
So stupid, it's painful
Molly Ivins - Creators Syndicate

05.05.05 - AUSTIN, Texas -- When the history of this administration is written, I suspect the largest black mark against it will be wasting time. The energy bill just passed by the House is a classic example of frittering away precious time and resources by doing exactly nothing that needs to be done about energy. The bill gives $8.1 billion in new tax breaks to the oil companies, which are already swimming in cash.

ExxonMobil's profits are up 44 percent, Royal Dutch/Shell up 42 percent, etc. According to the business pages, the biggest problem oil executives face is what to do with all their cash. So why give more tax breaks to the oil companies? Makes as much sense as anything else in this energy bill. Nothing about conservation, higher fuel efficiency standards or putting money into renewable energy sources. It's so stupid, it's painful.

And their genius answer to "energy independence"? Drill in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Look, the total oil under ANWR is 1 billion barrels less than this country uses in a year, according to Robert Bryce, the Texas journalist who specializes in energy reporting. The bill is just riddled with perversity: We continue to subsidize people who buy Hummers, but no longer grant tax rebates to those who buy hybrid cars that are more than six times as fuel efficient. This is not how you get to "energy independence." The United States hit its oil peak back in 1970 -- domestic production has been declining ever since.

I'm not sure I've ever seen anything quite as odd as the right wing's insistence that global warming does not exist. I'm not a climatologist, but I can read what they're saying. In fact, they're screaming it. Rush Limbaugh is not a climatologist, either, nor are any of the rest of these pinheads who seem to think the whole thing is some figment of liberals' imagination.

There's nothing liberal about global warming, it's science. There seems to be some element of childish spite in the refusal to recognize it -- "Boy, we can drive the liberals crazy by pretending it's not happening, ha, ha, ha." If you read right-wing blogs, you find a kind of Beavis and Butthead attitude about the subject, a sort of adolescent-jerk humor. What's astonishing is finding the same attitude among members of Congress. Head-militantly-in-sand is not a solution.

There is a perfect convergence of economic, environmental and energy considerations that all point in the same direction: renewable energy sources. With demand for gasoline soaring worldwide, with the economies of both China and India growing at staggering paces, with the world somewhere near its oil peak now, our dependence on some of the world's most retrograde regimes is only going to get worse and more expensive.

Foreign policy also plays a role here. Let us pass quickly by the administration's pre-war assurances that Iraqi oil would pay for the war -- the country is pumping less now than it did under Saddam Hussein. How smart is it to dick around trying to oust the president of Venezuela? You put a bunch of ideological nutcases in charge of Latin American policy, and you're going to create a lot of enemies down there.

And their answer is to bring back nukes? Let's review the bidding on that one. Aside from Murphy's Law, the problem with nukes is that they create radioactive waste that remains toxic for tens of thousands of years. And we don't know what to do with it. The First Rule of Holes applies -- if you're stuck in one, stop digging. We're already dependent on one form of energy that has a toxic legacy, why in heaven's name walk into another one, this time with foreknowledge of its effects? Especially when there are cheap, reliable, renewable, non-poison-producing alternatives? We're nuts to even think about it. Wind power already has near competitive prices.

Renewable energy sources are not pie-in-the-sky -- they're here right now, and they're going to be a lot cheaper than oil. The single cheapest thing we can do about oil is not use so much of it. Current hybrid technology will not get us to the mythical goal of "energy independence," but at least we can slow down the demand for oil. In theory, it only takes 15 years to replace the entire fleet of American cars now on the road. We don't have another four years to waste.

American energy policy -- written by Beavis and Butthead.
Freedom4all
QUOTE(rox63 @ May 6 2005, 01:25 PM)
Renewable energy sources are not pie-in-the-sky -- they're here right now, and they're going to be a lot cheaper than oil. The single cheapest thing we can do about oil is not use so much of it. Current hybrid technology will not get us to the mythical goal of "energy independence," but at least we can slow down the demand for oil. In theory, it only takes 15 years to replace the entire fleet of American cars now on the road. We don't have another four years to waste.


Hybrids are the new "small cars". Within ten years they will dominate the highways and increase fuel efficiency by 50%... then when plug-in hybrids are available in 2007 and beyond, their gasoline efficiency will be greater than 100 mpg.

www.AmericanEnergyIndependence.com/electricity.html
GoIllini
Molly Ivins- I know she's usually right, but why does she have to be so obnoxious about it?
Eino
QUOTE
Molly Ivins- I know she's usually right, but why does she have to be so obnoxious about it?


She can be very funny. I think in fifty years that they will be quoting her like they do Will Rogers. Her columns even drift up to the Northern Hinterlands that I frequent and from time to time have given me a big belly laugh. She's an American icon.

However, as much as I put the old gal on a pedestal, she's still alive and kickin' quite well and like the rest of us mere mortals, ole Molly can make a mistake from time to time.

QUOTE
And their answer is to bring back nukes? Let's review the bidding on that one. Aside from Murphy's Law, the problem with nukes is that they create radioactive waste that remains toxic for tens of thousands of years. And we don't know what to do with it. The First Rule of Holes applies -- if you're stuck in one, stop digging. We're already dependent on one form of energy that has a toxic legacy, why in heaven's name walk into another one, this time with foreknowledge of its effects? Especially when there are cheap, reliable, renewable, non-poison-producing alternatives? We're nuts to even think about it. Wind power already has near competitive prices.


Why walk into another one molly? Well, the fact is that it's still the best choice going.

I'm not saying Molly is totally wrong. After all, who am I to attack an American icon. Here's how the energy sources for electricity shook out for 2004:

QUOTE
During 2004, 50.0 percent of the Nation’s electric power was generated at coal-fired plants (Figure 1). Nuclear plants contributed 19.9 percent, 17.7 percent was generated by natural gas-fired plants, and 3.0 percent was generated at petroleum-fired plants. Hydroelectric power provided 6.6 percent of the total, while other renewables (primarily biomass, but also geothermal, solar, and wind) and other miscellaneous energy sources generated the remaining electric power. Figure 2 shows net generation by month for calendar year 2004.


The information was from Uncle Sam at DOE Info

You already paid Sam for it so you might as well take a look.

QUOTE
Renewable energy sources are not pie-in-the-sky -- they're here right now, and they're going to be a lot cheaper than oil.


As the DOE points out the renewables are here. If you exempt hydroelectric from the mix which is pretty well maxed out, renewables are lumped in with "other renewables" and made up less than 3% of the total. Sure Molly is right that these other sources are here, but just barely. They are also more expensive and have other problems. We ought to have more of them, but it ain't realistic to think we're going to have a wholesale replacement of our energy herd with some of these beasts just yet. they needs a bit more breeding.

I think we "are" currently stuck in one of those holes and the nuclear shovel is the eay to dig ourselves out.

On one of the other posts in this area, somebody said that their share of nuclear waste was less than a thimble full. Compare that to the waste from just about anything else. Seems to me that we can find room for it someplace. Sure its poison and stays poison for a long time, but this little bit of poison can substitute for a lot of that other poison such as the Mercury you get when you burn coal. It won't be in the fish you eat either, it'll be in a safe water tight canister.

A thimbleful of dirt ain't much.
searchingforsanity
Good article. When the facts are consistently being distorted, its good that someone can lay it out so that people can understand the issue and in a way that counters the distortion.
theglobalchinese
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