OK all personal criticism aside, can we talk about this:
The letter lists 13 steps that the signers believe must be taken immediately to guarantee the U.S.'s energy security. According to the letter, current efforts are not nearly enough: "The United States is currently spending 50 percent less on energy research and development than during the 1970s’ oil embargo. We spend less than four billion dollars a year on clean energy R&D, which is less than we spend in three days on imported oil today."
[taken from
this article.]
The 13 steps:
1. Aggressively Promote Energy Efficiency
2. Reduce the Environmental Impact of Energy Consumption and Production
3. Invest in Climate Science to Guide Energy, Economic, and Environmental Policy
4. Significantly Increase Funding for Research, Development, and Demonstration of Advanced Clean Energy Technologies
5. Immediately Expand Domestic Oil and Gas Exploration and Production
6. Commit to and Expand Nuclear Energy Use
7. Commit to the Use of Clean Coal
8. Increase Renewable Sources of Electricity
9. Transform Our Transportation Sector
10. Modernize and Protect U.S. Energy Infrastructure
11. Address Critical Shortages of Qualified Energy Professionals
12. Reduce Overly Burdensome Regulations and Opportunities for Frivolous Litigation
13. Demonstrate Global Leadership on Energy Security and Climate Change
[from
"the letter".]
I don't see anything about reducing energy consumption. Exploration for domestic oil will, in my mind, devastate delicate ecosystems that have barely survived thus far. And expand nuclear? That's a dangerous, limited resource. Clean coal? Very expensive, not even sure yet if it will be worth it, but since we have so much of the black stuff, we're on that train. Transform our transportation sector- great, but what about city planning for energy efficiency? De-regulate? Ohhhhhh kay. Seems these guys have chosen to heavily promote some industries over others (coal & nuclear over specifically wind & solar) to ensure continued economic growth and security over environmental conservation. Renewables can create more jobs and provide for economic growth too... And geopolitical conflict relief in the localization of energy markets.
Demonstrate Global Leadership- well, we're so far behind the curve on this one (cloudy Germany and Japan with solar, for ex) that we have a lot of catching up to do. I'm trying not to get cynical, but this letter does seem focused entirely on securing energy, not slowing climate change or setting a good example. Can we focus so heavily on an energy crisis without recognizing that if we don't work harder to reduce CO[sub]2[/sub] emissions, we won't be around to fight this battle?