Green leaders stimulated by Obama's plan

Enviros praise Obama’s stimulus package, but call for transit funding to be added 3

Muckraker: Grist on Politics

Environmental leaders gave a big thumbs-up to Barack Obama’s economic stimulus proposal on Thursday, though they pledged to continue pushing to make the bill as green as possible, particularly on transportation issues.

“This morning, President-elect Obama reaffirmed his commitment to invest in efficiency and clean energy technologies as part of his economic recovery package,” said League of Conservation Voters President Gene Karpinski in a statement. “Ready to hit the ground running, he offered specific details that offer great hope for America’s future success.”

Sierra Club Executive Director Carl Pope was also effusive in a statement: “These initiatives are a win-win for a strong economy and a healthier environment. They will create good jobs here in America and reduce our dependence on dirtier energy sources like oil and coal by promoting the shift to wind and solar power and high-energy-performance, low-carbon cars and buildings.”

Said Cathy Zoi, CEO of the Alliance for Climate Protection, “This increased investment in renewables, efficiency, and our energy infrastructure is a crucial first step in boosting our economy, ending our reliance on dirty coal and foreign oil, and solving the climate crisis.”

Friends of the Earth President Brent Blackwelder praised the plan too. “Obama’s call for ‘a whole new approach to meeting our most urgent challenges ... ending the culture of anything goes’ signals a refreshing break from the past,” he said.

Blue Green Alliance Executive Director David Foster told Grist that he thinks the plan is on the right trajectory, though he hasn’t seen enough detail yet to determine whether there’s adequate funding for green programs.  “I think the important point is that we have a significant green down payment, that we understand the importance of this in the stimulus, and that we forge ahead in using it as a building block to do a lot more in this Congress because I think it’s absolutely the smart way to think about economic development,” he said.

“I think we’re waking up and realizing that this is not just the worst fiscal crisis since the Great Depression, it’s actually going to turn into the greatest unemployment crisis since the Great Depression, and we need to focus on that human aspect of this,” Foster continued. “Alcoa announced that it was laying off 13,000 employees a few days ago. All other manufacturing companies I’m aware of are thinking about this situation as in free fall. I don’t think we’ve quite grasped yet how serious the economic devastation is out in Main Street, and we need to be thinking about all the different ways we’re going to transform the economy so that long-term it delivers on the jobs we need both now and in the future.”

One area of concern for environmentalists is transportation.  They had hoped to see dedicated funding for mass transit in the Obama plan, but the draft in circulation doesn’t include any.

Natural Resources Defense Council President Frances Beinecke told Grist she hasn’t yet reviewed the entire Obama plan, but will be working with Congress to make sure that mass transit sees increased funding, either through a stimulus bill or the transportation bill expected later this year.  “There will be more than one opportunity, but it’s critical that in the stimulus package transportation, particularly transit, get much greater attention,” she said. “We need greater investment not only to improve the transit systems we have, but to get more light rail, bus services, and rail, so not all Americans are as dependent on the car as they are now. People want choices and we need to provide them.”

Blackwelder also emphasized the importance of funding mass transit rather than new road projects. “[W]e are working with the president-elect’s team, as well as members of Congress, to ensure that wasteful spending on new roads will be kept out of the recovery package,” said Blackwelder. “Instead, we must invest in improving and expanding clean transportation options including public transit and passenger rail, as well as on maintaining and repairing the roads and bridges that already exist. Dollar for dollar, investments in public transportation and road and bridge repair create more jobs than new road construction and lead to cleaner air and less pollution.”

Pope too warned against lumping funding for dirty projects into the stimulus package. “As this plan moves to Congress, it is vitally important that the government focuses on investing in newer, cleaner, more efficient technology and not wasting money on costly, business-as-usual approaches like new coal plants, dams, or ‘highways to nowhere,’” said Pope. “We look forward to working with the new president and the Congress to pass this plan and keep it focused on the priorities that will provide short-term economic recovery and long-term economic stability and a cleaner, safer world.”

Kate Sheppard is Grist’s political reporter.

Advertisement
Advertisement
  1. stopgreenpath Posted 6:24 am
    08 Jan 2009

    what about us?where is the loan program and feed in tariff program for RATEPAYERS WHO ALL WANT TO GENERATE OUR OWN POWER AND BE PAID FOR IT?
    more remote, deadly power plants that destroy ecosystems and carbon sinks and more wasteful, unreliable powerlines that regularly burn down our forests are hardly a 21st century vision for sun and wind power, which is EVERYWHERE!  i can't believe the greenwashers are getting away with this!  even if you can ignore the total death of millions of acres of wilderness, after transmission losses and ) & M, point of use solutions are cheaper than these Big Energy disasters.
    we need feed in tariffs and loans.  look at the only countries with any success in renewable power and that is what you will see.  civic participation, where people are REWARDED for doing the right thing (generating clean power and cutting consumption).  we are totally disenfranchised, yet again, by this Big Energy giveaway.
    if you care at all about the environment, the economy, or the future, you will lobby HARD for feed in tariffs and loan funding so WE can participate in energy markets as more than hostages.

    the greenest energy is that which you needn't ever produce.
  2. Pompey Road Posted 12:24 pm
    08 Jan 2009

    Lobbyist at theGate:If Obama does not deal with serious lobbyist reform he will be like a salmon swimming up stream. His plan to offer a $3000.00 tax credit for a business that hires an employee is already under attack by both republican and democratic forces alike.
    If he offsets the tax breaks with closing the tax break for taking jobs or production overseas it will equal out and be cost neutral.
    Our balance of trade is killing us and the one sided trade deal with China will undermine any attempt to cure our long term economic ills.
    Obama's plan for infrastructure and green manufacturing will create the 3 million jobs he has projected. If he can squash some lobbyist and rescind the most favored trade status with China and close all tax loop holes for taking jobs overseas.
    If he can do as no one else has been able to do, stop the special interest earmarked spending and pork he will find enough cuts in the budget to find a balance 4 years out. If he also does massive cuts in empire sustaining spending projects, foreign spending, non productive and wastefull programs. He must also insist on competitive bidding for all government projects with realistic time lines and penalties for not meeting deadlines.
    The special interest pork and earmarked spending is a drop in the bucket for all the government subsidized waste off budget in most bills submitted for approval.
    If we are in such dire straights as he said today the rescue will call for sacrifice and conservative spending on everything but the recovery portion. He will have to take his plan to the people and put the spotlight on all the obstructionist. The bully pullpit be it the Roosevelt fireside chat or weekly news conferences to keep the public energized will be key.
    If we are going to be reliant on the Chinese to fund our recovery we need to at least show them we are working on fixing the economy in a responsible way. The trick will be to do it in such a manner that reduces our trade deficit with them while they are our main banker.
    2009 will be the worst year since the great depression. We can't afford the war in Iraq and Afghanistan, unfunded liabilities and the recovery at the same time.
    The power grid upgrade that allows for individuals to sell unused power back to the utility and investments in off grid power will generate a large portion of the green tech manufacuring jobs we will need for this recovery to work.

    The eons of time and nature was good to us down here. It was not until we become civilized that destroying our habitat become fathomable or fashionable.
  3. Cristopher B Posted 4:53 pm
    15 Jan 2009

    Will it be?Hopefully, this proposed plan would be efficient on taking the economy out from the recession, despite the fact that this is quite uncertain. Almost everybody is questioning this stimulus plan of Obama. Will it be effective? Will it save us from recession? Will it give us sunshine? To make this plan successful, Obmam will need help from his administration. Ms. Killefer has just been named as the Chief Performance Executive for President Elect Barack Obama's Executive team. Many just may wonder what a Chief Performance Officer is, as only a few corporations keep one on staff. A Chief Performance Executive makes sure that the services or products that a company offers performs up to standards, like payday loans, and the Obama administration will need all the help it can get. She has most likely been picked to ensure that the measures that President Obama oversees to revamp the nation's sluggish economy do what they are intended to do, as in get the American economy out of the recession, and get America back on track. One of his first plans is a stimulus that will get payday loans to the American people. To find out a bit more click payday loans to find out just what her office will be about.

Add a Comment

You are not logged in. Thus, you cannot post a comment. If you have an account, log in. If you don't have an account, well, by all means go make one! Meet you back here in five.

Hello, Visitor!    Why not register?

Advertisement