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Froma Harrop
Froma Harrop
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Clean Energy Worth the Political Muck

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Princely U.S. government subsidies have made developing wind, solar and other clean energy nearly risk-free to investors — and that's bad. But the price of this domestically produced power has tumbled, thanks in part to such aid. That helps clean energy compete with the fossil kind, which is definitely good.

So this is not quite the wasteful Washington outrage that foes of such subsidies make it out to be. President Obama's clean-energy program — funded in his stimulus bill and added to President George W. Bush's earlier push — mostly makes great sense. It strengthens America's position in the booming business of renewable energy while creating much-needed jobs. After all, other governments, such as China's, are pouring money into their new-energy industries.

But gosh, shouldn't Obama's people have written this thing to force the players to have, as they say, more of their own skin in the game? Of course, they should have. Mistakes were made, and more will surely be found. But let's hang in here. The outcome should be worth it.

In the sunny states of California, Arizona and Nevada, the cheapest solar power already undercuts conventional electricity at peak-hour rates, according to The Economist magazine. And tech advances will bring the cost down further. Oil imported from hostile countries or extracted locally using filthy processes may become a thing of the past.

Did we hear the word "Solyndra"? Solyndra is the California solar-panel maker that declared bankruptcy after receiving over $500 million in federal loan guarantees. A scandal brews over reports of Solyndra's alleged political favor-seeking. One concern centers on a high Energy Department official who pushed for the loan while his lawyer-wife represented the company.

House Republicans are investigating the Solyndra deal, as they should. But again, while the public financing process may not have been spotless, the company's innovative technology was the real deal.

Solyndra had developed panels that didn't use silicon, then an expensive substance. A later glut of solar panels — with China possibly selling them here below cost — ended Solyndra's price advantage and put it out of business.

China now commands over half the U.S. market for solar panels. American makers have accused it of dumping, and the Commerce Department is investigating the charges.

Meanwhile, Washington's generosity has greased most every search for new energy — whether help was needed, not needed or not needed as much. And that taxpayer largesse was not always carefully shepherded.

Fossil fuels have received a ton of subsidies. The coal business was handed land. Billions in tax breaks flow to oil companies. And it's hard to forget the disastrously expensive (to taxpayers) program to make synthetic fuel from coal.

The public subsidizes these energy sources in other ways. How many of our defense dollars have gone to protecting foreign oil supplies? For example, the Persian Gulf War was launched 21 years ago for one reason alone — to liberate Kuwaiti oil fields from Saddam Hussein's grip. That military action may have turned out well, but it did require sending 500,000 American souls into potential danger.

The big plus for oil from Canadian tar sands is that it comes from a friendly neighbor. But the process for extracting it emits huge amounts of greenhouse gases and uses large amounts of fresh water. And a proposed pipeline to bring that oil to refineries in Texas could put Nebraska's fragile Sand Hills at risk and threaten the irreplaceable Ogallala Aquifer, which supplies water in eight states.

With perseverance and patience, the glass in our energy future could overflow with nonpolluting power, produced at home. The path getting there may not be politically pristine, but in our perpetual search for energy, it's been a lot uglier.

To find out more about Froma Harrop, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL CO.

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM


Comments

2 Comments | Post Comment
"The path getting there may not be politically pristine, but in our perpetual search for energy, it's been a lot uglier."

What does this mean? It is ok to cheat if the ends jusify the means? We should tolerate the less than " politically pristine" in order to get where the left wants to go? Cheating and lying and stealing taxpayer money is ok as long as we get to some point that the left deems acceptable? This is morally bankrupt any way you wmt to look at it. Let littlle old ladies freeze in their homes this winter as long as the left feels morally superior. Progressives want to kill little old ladies for the sake of their green pogrom. Killers, that's what the left has become . Pristine my foot, the ends justify the means crowd is all we are talking about here. Ludite killers is the leftist evolution. Shame on you for condoning lies that only you consider for the "greater good". Lies will never be for the greater good, and deep down you know it. Pristine my foot. There is plenty of 21st century fuel out there, the left just won't let little old ladies use it afforadably. The left is determined to kill little old laidies in a less than "pristine" manner. Killers, that's what you are at the bottom line. Face up. Selfish animals, that's what Fromma considers her base. Are you one of them? Are you a selfish ludiite killer wishing death upon the less forunate? You have 12 months to decide. Lies will never serve the greater good. "Pristine" is an obfuscation in this article . Be wary of people willing to lie on any one's behalf.

Comment: #1
Posted by: Tom
Thu Nov 17, 2011 12:40 AM
"In the sunny states of California, Arizona and Nevada, the cheapest solar power already undercuts conventional electricity at peak-hour rates, according to The Economist magazine. And tech advances will bring the cost down further. Oil imported from hostile countries or extracted locally using filthy processes may become a thing of the past."
In the US oil is used in 1.1% of electrical production, solar is used in 0.1%. So if we replaced the 1.1% with solar, what effect would have that on oil?
Comment: #2
Posted by: David Morgan
Sun Nov 20, 2011 2:40 PM
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