chrispaine

author

The Basics

chrispaine’s Recent Comments

  • Click here to view comment in original post

    SOTU: What kind of money we talking about?

    Less than David Roberts thinks, unfortunately. The 22% increase in "clean energy research" cannot be assumed to be within the efficiency and renewables budget, because $281 million of it is for "clean coal" (without carbon capture) and another $54 million is for "FutureGen," an advanced coal demonstration plant with carbon capture. So that's $335 million for "nonrenewable" energy right there. Solar and wind together get $192 million -- considerably less than the $257 million dollar cost of a single F-22 fighter plane. "Homegrown renewable biofuels" get $150 million, and hydrogen fuel cells -- the least effective technology for oil savings in the short run -- gets the most money --$289 million. Fuel cells are a "renewable" energy technology only to the extent that the energy consumed in separating, purifying, compressing and transporting hydrogen comes from renewable sources, which it currently doesn't. So that's a toal of $624 million for non-renewable energy and $342 million for renewables. Efficiency improvements in cars, appliances, and buildings -- a huge potential source of energy savings -- are not even mentioned.On Not much posted 3 years, 9 months ago 1 Response

View All
Advertisment
Advertisment