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Ron A. Rhoades

Tom Friedman's New York Times Op-Ed on McCain / Palin - Can Anyone Share Insight?

I choose to post this as a blog on my page, rather than in the forums. I seek enlightened insight from "people in the know." I don't post this to debate politics.

I've been a big fan of Tom Friedman for years, as he provides a good global perspective on events. His op-ed piece in the New York Times today - well, I find it informative, yet disturbing. I reproduce the text of the op-ed piece below.

I suspect that Sen. McCain was on the campaign trail for the votes he missed, as Mr. Friedman mentions in the article. Does the McCain/Palin ticket really give only "lip service" to renewable energy development and deployment?

I seek answers, for while the energy issue is not the only issue which will determine who I vote for this year, it is one of the few major issues which will strongly influence my vote. Thank you for any illumination you can provide. Ron


New York Times
September 3, 2008
Op-Ed Columnist

And Then There Was One
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN

As we emerge from Labor Day, college students are gathering back on campuses not only to start the fall semester, but also, in some cases, to vote for the first time in a presidential election. There is no bigger issue on campuses these days than environment/energy. Going into this election, I thought that — for the first time — we would have a choice between two “green” candidates. That view is no longer operative — and college students (and everyone else) need to understand that.

With his choice of Sarah Palin — the Alaska governor who has advocated drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and does not believe mankind is playing any role in climate change — for vice president, John McCain has completed his makeover from the greenest Republican to run for president to just another representative of big oil.

Given the fact that Senator McCain deliberately avoided voting on all eight attempts to pass a bill extending the vital tax credits and production subsidies to expand our wind and solar industries, and given his support for lowering the gasoline tax in a reckless giveaway that would only promote more gasoline consumption and intensify our addiction to oil, and given his desire to make more oil-drilling, not innovation around renewable energy, the centerpiece of his energy policy — in an effort to mislead voters that support for drilling today would translate into lower prices at the pump today — McCain has forfeited any claim to be a green candidate.

So please, students, when McCain comes to your campus and flashes a few posters of wind turbines and solar panels, ask him why he has been AWOL when it came to Congress supporting these new technologies.

“Back in June, the Republican Party had a round-up,” said Carl Pope, the executive director of the Sierra Club. “One of the unbranded cattle — a wizened old maverick name John McCain — finally got roped. Then they branded him with a big ‘Lazy O’ — George Bush’s brand, where the O stands for oil. No more maverick.

“One of McCain’s last independent policies putting him at odds with Bush was his opposition to drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge,” added Pope, “yet he has now picked a running mate who has opposed holding big oil accountable and been dismissive of alternative energy while focusing her work on more oil drilling in a wildlife refuge and off of our coasts. While the northern edge of her state literally falls into the rising Arctic Ocean, Sarah Palin says, ‘The jury is still out on global warming.’ She’s the one hanging the jury — and John McCain is going to let her.”

Indeed, Palin’s much ballyhooed confrontations with the oil industry have all been about who should get more of the windfall profits, not how to end our addiction.

Barack Obama should be doing more to promote his green agenda, but at least he had the courage, in the heat of a Democratic primary, not to pander to voters by calling for a lifting of the gasoline tax. And while he has come out for a limited expansion of offshore drilling, he has refrained from misleading voters that this is in any way a solution to our energy problems.

I am not against a limited expansion of off-shore drilling now. But it is a complete sideshow. By constantly pounding into voters that his energy focus is to “drill, drill, drill,” McCain is diverting attention from what should be one of the central issues in this election: who has the better plan to promote massive innovation around clean power technologies and energy efficiency.

Why? Because renewable energy technologies — what I call “E.T.” — are going to constitute the next great global industry. They will rival and probably surpass “I.T.” — information technology. The country that spawns the most E.T. companies will enjoy more economic power, strategic advantage and rising standards of living. We need to make sure that is America. Big oil and OPEC want to make sure it is not.

Palin’s nomination for vice president and her desire to allow drilling in the Alaskan wilderness “reminded me of a lunch I had three and half years ago with one of the Russian trade attachés,” global trade consultant Edward Goldberg said to me. “After much wine, this gentleman told me that his country was very pleased that the Bush administration wanted to drill in the Alaskan wilderness. In his opinion, the amount of product one could actually derive from there was negligible in terms of needs. However, it signified that the Bush administration was not planning to do anything to create alternative energy, which of course would threaten the economic growth of Russia.”

So, college students, don’t let anyone tell you that on the issue of green, this election is not important. It is vitally important, and the alternatives could not be more black and white.

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Ron A. Rhoades Comment by Ron A. Rhoades on September 3, 2008 at 3:40pm
Linda C, Fascinating web site you suggested. Shows a real contrast between the candidates on the breadth of their approaches to the issues.

From what I understand, about expanded oil drilling, essentially the oil companies want to develop the cheapest-to-explore-and-drill areas first. It used to be that $1 spent for oil exploration and drilling returned $50 in oil. Nowadays drilling in less productive fields and oil shale requires more investment for less of a return on the dollar.

While I support increased domestic production of oil, there are some hard decisions to be made about balancing economic interests and environmental concerns. I don't know enough to even begin to be able to offer an opinion.

While increased domestic production of oil is worthwhile, chances are that - at best - it will maintain production at the current 30-35% of our country's oil needs (absent implementation of alternative energy resources). Demand will continue to grow, even if supply grows. So increased drilling for oil, while beneficial to a small degree, does not solve our overdependence on foreign oil imports.

Wind and solar energy technologies - both present and emerging - have the potential for vastly supplying energy needs. The key is adopting tax policies which favor both large-scale and small-scale (homeowner) renewable energy technlologies. Renewable energy deployment must be incentivized; as manufacturing ramps up of systems, technological innovation and efficiencies in manufacturing and competition will drive down costs of production and installations. But the wind and solar energies need a "kick start."

Electric plug-in vehicles and hydrogen fuel cells all offer means to use electricity to power vehicles. CNG vehicles are an interim solution, as T. Boone Pickens states. CNG vehicles may have longer life in the trucking world, given the long-distance nature of trucks and their need for power, unlikely to be filled by battery-driven vehicles anytime soon - hydrogen fuel cells may provide the answer there, over the long term.

Ethanol is another interim solution, though whether derived from corn or from other biomass it has the potential to cause long-term damage to the soil (since biomass is not tilled back into the soil) and may cause commodity prices to rise (as it already has, fueling not just vehicles but increased hunger around the world).

The PickensPlan has some solid foundations. While "the details" are lacking, the goals are clear. These goals include reduction of imports of foreign oil (and hence reducing our trade deficits), while at the same time reducing our carbon footprint (while not part of the PickensPlan platform, per se, a laudable environmental goal) and adding skilled jobs Americans can fill.

I'm all for bold proposals in this area. I'm ready to latch on to those who promote substantial progress, over the near-term, in this area. With the right federal, state and local government policies being adopted, the accomplishment of the goals are possible, even within a period as short as 10 years. Ron
Linda C Comment by Linda C on September 3, 2008 at 7:10am
Ron, Thanks for posting this. I'll read through it more carefully.
Have you been on CNGnow.com? I found this page interesting, comparing candidates.

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