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Clean-Energy Wish List: Six Federal Policy Actions To Ensure U.S. Leadership

By Ron Pernick, Clean Edge
November 9, 2009   |   20 Comments

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The information and views expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily those of RenewableEnergyWorld.com or the companies that advertise on its Web site and other publications.

20 Reader Comments
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Anonymous
November 9, 2009
This article is myopic environmentalist boilerplate.
Comment
2 of 20
November 9, 2009
While I think anonymous is exaggerating his assessment, it should be noted that conventional fuels folks don't define subsidies the way clean energy folks do...they think of their preferred treatment as a matter of accounting treatments (depletion allowances, etc....) I think we all need to agree on the playing field before we can adequately make the rules more fair--

-A
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3 of 20
Anonymous
November 9, 2009
Alison,
If anything, I was restrained in my criticism. This is an unprioritized laundry list of possible market adjustments. For instance, the author calls for a large RES, a carbon tax, and a cap and trade program. Why should we need all three? About the only thing the author didn't call for was increased R&D, yet this is probably the best way to expedite the point at which renewables can compete on their own against fossil fuels.

Regarding your wish to make the market more "fair"; do you consider an RES to be "fair"? Why should we exclude nuclear and carbon sequestration schemes from a large segment of the market?

Quibbling about subsides for fossil fuel industries, which don't significantly alter the energy market dynamics (as they are nearly negligible on a per unit of energy produced basis) seem petty and counterproductive when you are planning to ask for dramatically larger subsidies for renewables.
Anonymous#1
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4 of 20
November 10, 2009
From everything I've gleaned from my reading lately is nuclear, is to expensive to meter! The only way it can be profitable is by placing all the risk on the tax payers, the only people who stand a chance at benifitting are the contractors who build the power plants, oh and we still don't have anyplace to safely store the waste not a small consideration. And carbon sequestration is still unproven, doesn't consider the entire waste stream or the extraction process. It's really time to move beyond coal unless maybe you like eating more than a little mercury in your fish! And that's is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of degradation and exposure involved with coal. And being a rate payer with pge I can't tell you how much I enjoy still being able to help pay for the construction cost, demolition, and the monitoring of a core that can't be moved or disposed of for another 200yrs all at the same time.
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5 of 20
November 10, 2009
Put an immediate $50 per ton price on Carbon from our largest polluters, with no free offsets or allowances and all else will happen naturally. Reinvest the money in Renewable Energy production, energy customer rebates, and large scale agricultural conservation.

You are absolutely right about nuclear. But, to keep up with China and Europe we will end up investing in baseband nuclear plants to replace and expand on aging ones. They should be appropiately priced though, to account for waste and potential accidents. Their 60 year lifespan is attractive to Utilities. In the meantime, we also have over 330 GW of Offshore wind potential on the OCS. An eastern grid of Offhore wind can be developed faster than a dozen nuclear plants and provide more energy without the waste. It's not baseband, but combined with Natural Gas it can be.
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Anonymous
November 11, 2009
Renewable energy subsidies over the last 6 years have been below $1 billion. Fossil subsidies ~$72 billion. Why the anonymous#1 complaints?

If anything is myopic, then it is paying trillions of petrodollars to countries that are hostile to the US. It unnecessarily funds the US adversaries in Middle East wars.

Such wars are effectively a further multi-trillion subsidy to the fossil fuel industry.

Only a serious commitment to renewables can reverse this ominous trend.

Fossil & nuclear protagonists ignore & try to discredit the serious threat posed by climate change & nuclear weapons proliferation. Also the threat posed by nuclear plants during war -- when power plants are prime targets.

The radioactivity inside a nuclear power reactor dwarfs that of a nuclear weapon, and if one should be blown up in wartime, Hiroshima will look like a Sunday-school picnic.

Nuclear plants are not CO2 neutral, and in future will be anything but -- as high grade uranium ores (and decommissioned nuclear weapons) are used up, low grade ores will be used. These require massive fossil fuel expenditure.
Comment
7 of 20
November 11, 2009
3) Overhaul energy subsidies to shift from imported fossil fuels to domestic clean energy. ... I believe that the federal government should reassess this focus on supporting profitable fossil fuel industries, and shift these subsidies to the industries of the future: solar, wind, geothermal, energy efficiency and the like."

Agreed that the Government should not subsidize fossil fuels, but your concluding line is, to borrow from "an unprioritized laundry list of possible market adjustments". There is not a pot of money out there that some group of wise people said "this is the optimal amount that taxpayers should pony up to support energy". Expenditure on energy subsidies has been the result of a cumulation of historical decisions that are easy to implement and hard to undo once they are in place. That level of expenditure might be too much on energy, or it might be too little. It is unlikely to be just right.

But say we take the $15 billion, or $30 billion (depending on how one defines a subsidy) of annual subsidies to fossil fuels and switch that amount directly to supporting renewable energy. How would you prioritize that, Mr. Pernick? And in what form would you give it? Support for the installation of solar cells? Well, if you do that too fast, you may simply drive up the price of those cells, as happened in response to Germany's subsidies. Subsidize R&D? Perhaps better, but how you going to choose among the competing claims for that money? And what would you do to avoid locking in old, inefficient technologies, or making the mistake of betting on the wrong horse, as happened with subsidies for first-generation biofuels -- which continue to grow apace. Shouldn't consumers, ultimately, be paying the true cost of energy? Yet subsidies hide that true cost. So what is your exit plan?
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Anonymous
November 11, 2009
Representative Edward Markey,Massachusetts wrote a letter the other day to Interior Secretary Ken Salazar. Chairman Markey now appears to be acting as a consultant for Cape Wind. The representative has taken the position he will lead the 2009 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen for the United States

This letter was written in spite of an appeal by the Wamanoag Indians over their religious beliefs on Nantucket Sound and the Cape Wind project. Brona Simon, Massachusetts State Historic Preservation Officer, said the request needs further study. This decision will inject delays of more than a year into the Cape Wind timeline.

The United Nations Climate Change Conference takes place DEC 7 to DEC 17 and appears that Massachusetts wants the claim of the Wampanoag Indians out of the picture before the conference. Representative Edward J. Markey, a national leader on energy and the environment, chairs the Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming and the Energy and Environment Subcommittee of the Energy and Commerce Committee is not a proponent of the Wamanoag Indians ,the people he represents.

It should be brought to the attention of the United Nations that the Wampanoags say their spiritual greetings of the sun require unobstructed views and say turbines could disturb the ancestral burying grounds.

The North American Indians have rights secured under Indian treaties and agreements with the United States. They have the right to ask for the divine blessing of the creator.
The Indians were the first people. They have a right to be heard. Lets tell the world the genocide of millions of their people, the theft of their lands, and the relentless assault on their culture.
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Anonymous
November 11, 2009
Perhaps the author of comment #8 will enlighten us as to precisely which treaty (and specifically which passage of text) assures the Wampanoags an entirely unobstructed view of the sun? I suspect that no such text exists and the notion that it would take more than a year to decide whether or not such a right exists is outlandish. Developers don't always deserve approval of their projects but they should be entitled to a timely decision.
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Anonymous
November 11, 2009
The author of comment #6 writes "Renewable energy subsidies over the last 6 years have been below $1 billion. Fossil subsidies ~$72 billion." One wonders where he gets such inaccurate numbers. Possibly he is thinking of the recent and highly biased ELI study claiming 72 Billion dollars for fossil fuels over SEVEN years vs. 17 Billion dollars for renewables. This study is an absolute canard; see my remarks in this thread:
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2009/10/fossil-fuels-subsidies-more-than-doubles-those-for-renewables

In particular, this article was intended as federal policy advice; so lets consider for a moment how advice to close the strategic petroleum reserve and defund the low income home energy assistance program--both considered a fossil fuel subsidy by the ELI--in order to increase funding for renewables would go over on capitol hill. To accelerate renewable energy technology adoption rates to a significant degree will require market intervention on a scale that is huge by comparison to the paltry few billion dollars per year given to the fossil fuel industry so it is a waste of time fighting over those few crumbs (and many of the subsidies are things rational people would want to keep funding anyway). Even now, the market value of the set asides for renewable generation in the US greatly exceeds the subsidies given to fossil fuels and a large amount of funding for renewables is collected as fees on utility bills.
Steven
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11 of 20
Anonymous
November 11, 2009
The author of comment #6 writes: "If anything is myopic, then it is paying trillions of petrodollars to countries that are hostile to the US."

I don't recall anyone suggesting that continued reliance on fossil fuels was a good idea. The article written here offers no clear plan for how to reverse our dependence on oil. Indeed, it omits any reference to research funding for new renewable technologies and instead advocates for top-down market manipulation that isn't especially likely to spur technological innovation. In particular, it calls for virtually every form of top-down market intervention rather than a coherent strategy with clear goals and reasonable projections.

The author of comment #6 also writes: "Nuclear plants are not CO2 neutral, and in future will be anything but -- as high grade uranium ores (and decommissioned nuclear weapons) are used up, low grade ores will be used. These require massive fossil fuel expenditure."

This is nonsense. Mining and processing uranium ore does require energy expenditure--as does manufacture of PV cells, wind turbines, etc.--but there is no requirement that this be from fossil fuels. Nuclear fission technology is inherently carbon neutral as no CO2 is produced in the fission process.

Steven
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12 of 20
November 11, 2009
This is all very interesting, but we need to boil this down. All this is information that we all know already. This article states nothing new, nor does it think outside the box to solve the problems we have today. It states a lot of things we should do, but it does not take into account what all those things would do together to energy prices.

Fact: We need more renewable energy on the US grid to stop relying on third world countries for our sources of energy. We all know this. If you don't or don't agree with this, why are you reading Renewable Energy World.?

How about we take this one step further and figure out where most of the steel in the ground has been financed to date? The answer is the free market. Not the RPS, but everyday people and businesses buying green power from their utilities. Over 50% of the renewable energy steel in the ground to date was built to satisfy the volunteer demand for it. Now, would that steel in the ground have been build anyway? There is no way to quantify that. I guess we could make volunteer renewable programs illegal and see what gets built... Bet you things come to a screeching halt.

Solution: Here in Oregon we have a bill called SB1149. That requires all investor owned utilities in Oregon to have a green power program that offers a 100% renewable option and they cannot profit from it. It sets up a committee made of public and privet energy players to audit the program 13 times a year to make sure the funds go to purchasing renewable energy and requires a third party marketer to market the program.

Effect? Oregon has gone from a nobody for wind energy to in the top 5 states in the country and has one of the largest wind farms in the US under construction with the largest in the world in the permitting process. Our RPS was passed in 2007. We were already in the top 8 states in the country by the time that passed.

So there you have it. The free market works. So there is a new idea to chew on.
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13 of 20
November 11, 2009
Brad,
I don't agree with the conclusion that SB1149 has made Oregon one of the top 5 states in the country for wind. Investors are in this business to make a profit; and sure if increased prices for green tags and higher prices for renewables increase the value of the output from their investment, they are more likely to invest. But compared to other states in the US, the NW has a consistent wind source near the existing transmission grid, and a steady supply of cheap hydro to balance the wind's intermittentcy. When comparing across states, the key drivers are in these physical characteristics of the existing systems that make the biggest differences.
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14 of 20
Anonymous
November 11, 2009
In reference to comment number eight. It does not appear that Representative Markey is looking out for the best interest of the Indians but rather he wants to score some points with the United Nations .

It's time for the rest of the world (UN) to step up to the plate about what the United States did to the Indians . The US is so critical of genocide around the world! Lets let the Indians have their review of Cape Wind !

While your at home during Thanksgiving with your family give this quote a little thought and who exactley is involved with genocide :

"Since 1970, Native Americans have gathered at noon on Cole's Hill in Plymouth to commemorate a National Day of Mourning on the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday. Many Native Americans do not celebrate the arrival of the Pilgrims and other European settlers. To them, Thanksgiving Day is a reminder of the genocide of millions of their people, the theft of their lands, and the relentless assault on their culture. Participants in the National Day of Mourning honor Native ancestors and the struggles of Native peoples to survive today. It is a day of remembrance as well as a protest of the racism and oppression which Native Americans continue to experience."

Thank You Rep Ed Markey , Massachusetts
Comment
15 of 20
November 13, 2009
simpsonm,
I agree that the NW has several great things going for it for the development of Wind energy. The Northwest is well suited for the development of wind, but the growth of Wind in the NW is a simple case of the laws of supply and demand.

In 1998, there was only one wind farm in the operation in the Northwest and that was Vansycle for a whopping 25MW. All previous wind farm projects had failed up to this point and no others were even in the permitting process. The wind was there, the lines where there, the hydro was there, but the demand was not. Wind was more expensive to build, so why build it? 1999 SB1149 passes, the two investor owned utilities are forced to create a volunteer green power program and the everyday people of the pacific northwest can choose where they want to buy their energy from. Suddenly three wind farms (State Line, Condon and Klondike P1) go in to the permitting process with an operational date of 2001 for a combined 373MW's. A 1400% increase! Since that time, over 150,000 homes and businesses in the NW have made that switch to volunteering to buy renewable energy from their utility providers while another 2734+MW in Oregon and Washington have come on line. That is proving to investors that building a wind farm in the NW will mean that they have a buyer for their product upon completion. All I am clamming here is that 50% of this growth is due to SB1149.

IF you want to talk investment and the price of REC, then your assessment that REC price equaling the growth of wind in the NW over the last nine years is complete nonsense. Sorry man, but in the years between 2000 and 2007 REC pricing was steady and in many cases went down due to so many wind farms coming on line in such a short time. In 2007, SB838 or Oregon's RPS was passed and since that time REC prices have gone through the roof. California's 30% by 2020 RPS has not helped prices either. Need cheap REC's? Go to a state like Oklahoma without an RPS. Supply and demand.
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16 of 20
November 13, 2009
All political persuasions agree, building soil carbon is GOOD.
To Hard bitten Farmers, wary of carbon regulations that only increase their costs, Building soil carbon is a savory bone, to do well while doing good.

Biochar provides the tool powerful enough to cover Farming's carbon foot print while lowering cost simultaneously.

The Clean Energy Partnerships Act of 2009
The bill is designed to ensure that any US domestic cap-and-trade bill provides maximum incentives and opportunities for the US agricultural and forestry sectors to provide high-quality offsets and GHG emissions reductions for credit or financial incentives. Carbon offsets play a critical role in keeping the costs of a cap-and-trade program low for society as well as for capped sectors and entities, while providing valuable emissions reductions and income generation opportunities for the agricultural sector. The bill specifically identifies biochar production and use as eligible for offset credits, and identifies biochar as a high priority for USDA R&D, with funding authorized by the bill.
To read the full text of the bill, go to: http://www.biochar-international.org/sites/default/files/END09F94.pdf.

Senator Baucus is co-sponsoring a bill along with Senator Tester (D-MT) called WE CHAR. Water Efficiency via Carbon Harvesting and Restoration Act! S. 1713, It focuses on promoting biochar technology to address invasive species and forest biomass. It includes grants and loans for biochar market research and development, biochar characterization and environmental analyses. It directs USDI and USDA to provide loan guarantees for biochar technologies and on-the-ground production with an emphasis on biomass from public lands. And the USGS is to do biomas availability assessments.

Individual and groups can show support for WECHAR by signing online at:
www.biocharmatters.org
http://www.biocharmatters.org/

Carbon to the Soil, the only ubiquitous and economic place to put it.
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17 of 20
November 17, 2009
In order to get the right answer you must ask the right question. What if we enacted some sort of WTO-proof (maybe a stretch) legislation that places a market floor for imported fossil fuels at $80/barrel?
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18 of 20
November 17, 2009
Yes to all six. I would add one more; Population control. Long before global warming will destroy the world, overpopulation and the resulting fight for resources will send us back to the dark ages. Religidiots bent on preserving their turf for their gods (and economies) will fight to preserve their current share of the resources. The earth cannot now sustainably support the population we have. Every human has an impact no matter how simply the live.
I have lived off grid for 25+ years but I still have an impact on the environment, whether its encouraging my dogs to kill wood rats, or my shooting deer, or my driving to town to pick up my junk mail. Six billion people living as comfortable as I do will never be possible, and I'm unwilling to give up any of my comfort just so some one else can add more people to world population. I think there should be a head tax on every human. Eliminate the subsidies for children. Charge parents for the infrastructure necessary to educate, feed, transport, defend, police, medicate, and entertain their offspring. If they cannot afford it then kill them all. Just kidding!

Instead of a carbon tax, I think we need a pollution tax. This would include all greenhouse gasses, mining waste, industrial waste, nuclear waste, farming runoff, livestock waste, human waste, add your own favorites. That would make me pay the full cost of my PV system and extravagant lifestyle.
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19 of 20
Anonymous
November 18, 2009
What is a leader?
There should be a strong relationship between the pack who is being led and the leader, if not, the leader is not a leader.
I would like to see more "world leading" and less "individual developed countries race".
The common goal is to reduce greenhouse emissions, and a lot more can be done in developing countries. Technology transfer and education is important between developed and developing countries to achieve this goal.
Technology such as Smart grid gives users options , and it should be like that everywhere. This is not happening in the island of San Andres, Colombia, where renewable energy subsidies where given only to wind energy and not to solar or other renewables, favoring the wind energy contractor. Locals where not informed properly, only until the business was done. I think this is corruption,. and it will probably happen again.
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Anonymous
December 24, 2009
Here's making use of the tax credits (over 100% income taxes returned) here: tnns.org/energy-credit
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About: Ron Pernick, co-founder and principal of Clean Edge and co-author of The Clean Tech Revolution, is an accomplished market research, publishing, and business dev... more »

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