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For Secure Energy Future, Obama Must Be Like Ike

By Leon Steinberg, National Wind
October 23, 2009   |   7 Comments

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7 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 7
October 28, 2009
Leon,
what you say is perfectly sensible. But, in the days of Eisenhower, he was actually able to make things happen. Today, our Government is owned by large corporations and single-interest pressure groups, who ensure that nothing will happen, no matter how sensible it is. Our national unity has been replaced by a narrow-minded selfish attitude, so our motto should be changed to: E unis plura.
Comment
2 of 7
October 28, 2009
When it comes to our energy future, I strongly agree with the statement that Obama needs to be "like Ike". Here is what Ike had to say about energy during a famous December 1953 speech to the United Nations:

"The United States knows that peaceful power from atomic energy is no dream of the future. That capability, already proved, is here--now--today. Who can doubt, if the entire body of the world's scientists and engineers had adequate amounts of fissionable material with which to test and develop their ideas, that this capability would rapidly be transformed into universal, efficient, and economic usage."

There is no need for a massive, ugly build up of a new web of transmission lines running from places with unreliable, weather dependent energy sources that require enormous, often idle collectors. Instead, we can repower our existing power plant network with new heat sources that are reliable, emission free, and produce affordable power for years between each need to replace the fuel. The used material is recyclable and contains many valuable by-products that can be put to good use through the application of human creativity.
Comment
3 of 7
October 28, 2009
@ Rod Adams,

If you are referring to nuclear fission power, you are mistaken on so many counts. Firstly, do you consider huge concrete block structures more aesthetically pleasing than a network of power lines? Where would you site these power stations? Generally, because no one wants to live near a nuclear power station, they are far from the point of use, causing massive transmission losses and reducing their efficiency significantly.

Nuclear is not emission free - the emissions related to the construction and deconstruction are significant.

Thirdly, not a single nuclear power plant has been built on time, or on schedule. Anywhere on Earth. Ever. Consumers pay 4 times for the energy they use (tax breaks/subsidies in construction, operation, and decommissioning, plus paying for the energy used) and our great grandchildren will be paying for the decommissioning. How is this affordable?

The fuel may be 'recyclable' in your opinion. But here in the UK where we have a reprocessing facility, they have failed so abysmally to meet their targets due to the difficulty and danger of the task that they were at risk of being sued by the German government earlier this year. And what valuable by-product do we obtain from spent nuclear fuel?

Then we come to the safety issue. If you Google "Nuclear Incidents Accidents 2009" You will find page after page of figures related to nuclear safety breaches in pretty much every country in the world. This is without the threat of terrorist attacks (which the US is now *so* afraid of) - how much greater would the danger be if we had to factor in the potential for an attack on any kind nuclear facility?

Your logic is false I'm afraid. Ike's speech to the UN in 1953 was indicative of the time. It was a period of discovery and nuclear was a new and potentially gamechanging fuel. Unfortunately, it turned out to be just as dangerous and harmful as other fossils.

One last note. You only mention
Comment
4 of 7
October 28, 2009
Correction:

One last note. You only mention the US energy security, but if the entire world goes nuclear for their energy, we will be at peak uranium in 50 years or less. Despite whatever reprocessing can be achieved. This will lead to further conflict between nations. On the other hand, if the entire world adopted renewable energy technologies, there would be plenty for everyone. Or does the rest of the world not figure in your nuclear vision?
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Comment
5 of 7
Anonymous
October 28, 2009
ignorance of physics is bliss. you assume only 'green' electrons will be allowed to travel on these superhighways. just like our interstates accommodate trucks of all stripes, so will a free-flowing, extra-high voltage AC system. this overlay will only help king coal preserve its crown -- looks who's pushing for it: AEP, Allegheny, etc.
Comment
6 of 7
October 28, 2009
So... does the view of Anonymous lead to the conclusion that we should oppose a SmartGrid, and thus keep transmission lines in the selfish, self-serving hands of individual states and regulators?
Comment
7 of 7
October 29, 2009
Hello from NE Wisconsin:

I don't think that the map for existing transmission lines is up to date. Within the last year or so, a large transmission line was built to accomadate hydroelectric power from Manitoba, Canada to Minnesota to Wisconsin. Most of that power was sure to go to Illinois--particularly Chicago.

One utility here in Wisconsin has developed a wind farm in Iowa, because there is less confrontation in Iowa for locating wind farms then in eastern Wisconsin. In the same breadth, another utility is siting wind farm after wind farm in eastern Wisconsin. So--go figure.

This author has an interesting story to tell regarding the renewable portfolio standard and whether all states will be able to meet their renewable energy goals--if this bill should pass Congress (and the President signs it into law). Whether the RPS is 20% by 2020 or 25% by 2025, the problem remains; and that is, where is all this renewable energy going to come from? Even states like California may have to import renewable energy from outside its borders. And so, this transmission issue is basically just starting, because the states that have their own RPS have to grapple with timelines to meet their own existing standards.

I think alot of the states along the coasts (where all the people are) can help themselves by developing tidal current generators, wave generators, and wind farms along the continental shelf.

One fellow who wrote against nuclear power is right to express his feelings about this type of power generation. However, the article wasn't about nuclear power, nor was it about wind energy--it was about transmitting renewable energy electrons and the long term strategy that the federal government is tasked to remedy.
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