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DOE Helps States Foster Gigawatt-level Renewable Energy Developments

By Jennifer Runyon, Managing Editor
September 11, 2008   |   12 Comments

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"These projects will stimulate innovative state policy activities and investments to help transform markets for energy efficiency and renewable energy."

-- David Rodgers, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
12 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 12
September 11, 2008
Way to go USA. I look forward to this pittance solving the minor challenge of global climate catastrophe!
Comment
2 of 12
September 11, 2008
I have to agree, BP. Alota hoopla and no substance.
Comment
3 of 12
September 12, 2008
Once the US got out there an built things. Now it spends its seed money on consultants writing reports on frameworks for enabling other people to do things. Sheesh.

China is the new US : brash, can do , makes a lot of mess on the way but makes things happen.

Come on US, we look to you for leadership and action . Dont let us all down.
Comment
4 of 12
September 12, 2008
Being an engineer and energy product inventor in the Michigan, it is a little frustrating to see our emphasis on politics and fossil fuels while the gifts of free available energy are neglected.

The available wind energy and manufacturing opportunities in Michigan are greatly not being captured because our legislature has not passed a Renewable Power Standard. The governor and her energy staff have fought hard to convince them of the lost opportunities from lack of RPS and there is still no legislation. Yesterday, there was a grass roots "protest" activity in our capital to raise the awareness of the legislature that people really want to foster a Greentech industry. Manufacturing needs the opportunities it will bring.

The US seems to have lost the will to COMMIT to sustainable new development to stem the loss of money and lives supporting the fossil fuels industry. Simple logic points to the benefits of changing our lifestyle to increase energy efficiency and renewable energy infrastructure, yet the political influence and money of big oil distorts the "reality" seen by average people. We NEED TO DO BETTER!!!!

There is finally some change of status quo driven by pain avoidance. The higher cost of fossil fuels is driving the issue. The cost we pay is still much cheaper than seen the EU and UK, who are driven harder to choose the more sustainable path. Price distortions in the US by subsidies for fossil fuels delay the inevitable change that we must make to stem global climate meltdown.

So, it all comes down to the distortions of money and politics preventing the sheeple realizing a better long term lifestyle on a climate friendly planet.

We the people need to lead the sheeple away from the flat earth logic of "drill baby......DRILL". Integration of sustainable technology into a crumbling energy architecture must start NOW if we are to survive as a species.


Keith Vosburgh
Total Energy Solutions LLC
Comment
5 of 12
September 12, 2008
Keith,
You might want to add algal oil-to-biodiesel to your list of Greentechs. See: http://algaloildiesel.wetpaint.com/. Especially, please read :"PROSPECTS FOR THE BIODIESEL INDUSTRY"..

Jim Miller
Jim Miller5417@yahoo.com
Comment
6 of 12
September 12, 2008
This meager US Federal contribution to renewable energy in only 9 states needs to be discussed in the presidential and congressional debates in all 50 states and territories. The monopoly of energy control must be fought at all levels.
Comment
7 of 12
September 12, 2008
Without leadership in government it seems the only way the American public responds to both the energy and global warming crises is through higher gas prices. If the Republicans win and simply drill off shore and in ANWAR the prices will continue to rise for several years meaning greater oil subsidies and more depletion. The results of this will be individual states scratching for funds to continue their renewable push, increased rancor with the feds and stressed local economies. Hopefully the Democrats will in fact commit to federal renewable leadership once in office. If not its every state for itself. But hey, look on the bright side, at least they'll have their paperwork in order.
Comment
8 of 12
September 12, 2008
Folks,

I read that John "George" McCain has an anger management problem. If he is elected, most of the rest of us will have a serious anger management problem. It's time to work for Obama and against McCain.
Comment
9 of 12
September 14, 2008
Any initiative needs measures of effectiveness. In order to assure the correct invetments in energy sources there is a need to clarify and codify for people the current real price of the existing energy sources and the maximum price that should be paid for alternative energy sources based on the various systems life cycle costs. This codification will also help assure the effective programs initiatives are selected and act as inspiration for manufacturers and business people.

Recently there was alot of talk about nuclear power as an energy alterantive. Considering the need to secure the waste from those processes it seems hard to image it is a cost effective technology.
Comment
10 of 12
September 17, 2008
I agree with several comments here, but all we could truly hope for is a government that DOES NOT subsidize any particular technology. If the marketplace was left alone and the coal, nuclear, oil, biofuel, farm, and other subsidies were taken off the table, renewables might just have a fighting chance!
Comment
11 of 12
September 17, 2008
Rainmaker:

There is no "magic" in the "marketplace". Energy is highly controlled by OPEC, the Seven Sisters, and an ologopoly of extremely wealthy energy comanies which control supplies and prices. The "market place" concept is a fraud on the consumers and voters.
Comment
12 of 12
September 17, 2008
James E Miller:

The "marketplace" is the opposite of majic....that's precisely the point. The marketplace is what made America a great country. Do you think consumers want foreign oil when there is a clean, renewable, domestic alternative? Every day more renewable energy goes online, and often it is wealthy companies that flick on the switch; does that make them evil?
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Jennifer Runyon

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About: Jennifer Runyon is managing editor of RenewableEnergyWorld.com and Renewable Energy World North America magazine, coordinating, writing and/or editing columns, ... more »

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