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Enviros Suck"Clean cars" are the devil's tools, diverting attention from truly green solutions26 Jan 2001
The shock to my system from the vehicular hype notwithstanding, this environmental ruse -- a green-gimmick sales pitch -- is understandable from the manufacturer's perspective. "The industry is in crisis," says even the nightly French television news, showing an empty Chrysler lot. With automobile sales slowing, Detroit seems conflicted -- Ford is going retro with a new/old Thunderbird, while General Motors is burying the Oldsmobile. Disturbingly, however, it isn't only the Big Three heirs or the online peddlers who are pushing us to purchase a new vehicle, through their consume to conserve come-on. It's the greens who are buying -- and buying plenty. The new hybrid Toyota Prius is backlisted with the names of enviro buyers, while eco-leaders like Amory Lovins preach that the fuel cell will solve all our transportation ills. Praise for new technology vehicles dominated even the plenary session at the fall meeting of the Society of Environmental Journalists, set two hours north of Motown, in Lansing, Mich., last fall.
Is the Prius drawing enviros to the Dark Side?
Why are enviros offering such fractionalized, automated, anti-environmental solutions to our mobility woes?, I wondered. Why weren't they calling for walkable communities? or public transit? or smaller oil and auto subsidies? Instead of gathering signatures of advocates for clean-car alternatives, why weren't green activists attacking the $58 billion federal transportation bill skewed to the automobile? Instead of obeying the Toyota Prius plea to buy because "obviously nature approves," why weren't they considering the automobile's larger mistreatment of the natural world? Wake Up!But the "clean car" alternative is a pernicious palliative from the get-go. Behind the camouflage lies this truth: One-third of the energy and resources consumed in the lifetime of each automobile are consumed in production. And the problems don't end there. A "clean car" does not ameliorate the damage done by our paving the planet. Clean car or no, highways and their runoff remain the primary contributor to habitat disruption and species loss. Clean car or no, sprawl consumes 1.2 million acres of farmland a year and 60,000 acres of wetland, eroding our urban and suburban cores in the process.
A breath of fresh air?
Photo: NREL/PIX.
In the end, buying into pseudo-clean consumption undermines any real possibility that politics and planning will solve the land use and environmental problems bred by car dependency. As the millennium begins, such planning offers us a chance to do better. New light-rail lines combined with plans for transit-oriented development have proved effective even in live-free-or-die Dallas, Amtrak use is on the rise, and the misery of traffic congestion and environmental destruction is winning daily converts to the cause. Environmentalists must see through the faux green contrivances of the car guys and plan a truly green mobility. |
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