Ronald Bailey
Some 600 organizations have sent a letter
to Congress outlining their vision of a Green New Deal. The letter
asserts that "we must act aggressively and quickly" to address the
problem of man-made climate change, which the letter declares to be the
"gravest environmental crisis humanity has ever faced." Surely you'd
think that this coalition would advocate doing whatever it takes to ameliorate the "urgent threat" posed by global warming, but you'd be wrong.
The letter's signatories demand that Congress pass legislation
mandating that the U.S. shift to 100 percent renewable electric power
generation by 2035 or earlier. In addition, Congress must adopt
legislation "encouraging public and community ownership over power
infrastructure and electricity choice" and also make sure that our
"distributed energy systems...are democratically governed."
The letter's signatories then, however, insist that "any definition
of renewable energy must also exclude all combustion-based power
generation, nuclear, biomass energy, large scale hydro and
waste-to-energy technologies." Furthermore, the coalition opposes
"market-based mechanisms and technology options such as carbon and
emissions trading and offsets, carbon capture and storage, nuclear
power, waste-to-energy and biomass energy." Basically, the only
acceptable energy is electricity produced by wind or solar power.
A tweet by University of Colorado political scientist
Roger Pielke Jr. sums up the self-defeating irrationality of their
demands well.
Let's focus on nuclear power. In Science last week, the team of researchers behind the recent MIT report, The Future of Nuclear Energy in a Carbon-Constrained World, pointed out
that the most effective and least costly path toward the sort of
massive cuts in carbon dioxide emissions being advocated by Green New
Dealers is a combination of variable renewable energy technologies and
nuclear power.
"Nuclear energy is one low-carbon dispatchable option that is
virtually unlimited and available now," the MIT researchers argue.
"Excluding nuclear power could double or triple the average cost of
electricity for deep decarbonization scenarios because of the enormous
overcapacity of solar energy, wind energy, and batteries that would be
required to meet demand in the absence of a dispatchable low-carbon
energy source."
They recognize that the costs of nuclear power plants have escalated,
but suggest that there are ways to rein in costs in the future.
Cynics among us might suspect that the Green New Dealers, by
excluding market mechanisms and nuclear power as part of the portfolio
of options for addressing the problem of global warming, are not
irrational, but are using climate change as an excuse to pursue other social and economic goals.
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
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