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Al Gore Inches Toward Solartopia

Published on Saturday, July 19, 2008 by CommonDreams.org

Al Gore Inches Toward Solartopia

by Harvey Wasserman

Bit by bit, Al Gore seems to be inching toward a Solartopian view of a future that must be completely sustainable in green energy. This week he advocated getting to an electric power system that is “carbon free” within ten years.

This is an important step toward the mainstream for the decades-long social movement for a totally green-powered Earth. It comes alongside the equally telling move by oil baron T. Boone Pickens to invest $2 billion in wind power.

Gore has reportedly raised some $300 million (that’s not a typo) to spend on moving pubic opinion to support the transition to a totally “carbon-free” electric supply system.

That idea has been around at least thirty years, and is a sub-set of the Solartopian demand that our entire energy economy become free of all fossil and nuclear fuels.

Of late, Gore has become the corporate media’s designated hitter on renewables. He has helped greatly in moving public acceptance of the critical need to achieve a green-powered Earth in a relatively short period of time. It’s extremely helpful that Gore emphasizes that the conversion to renewables and efficiency will create economic wealth and millions of new jobs while alleviating the national security nightmare of being dependent on foreign oil.

But there is still a long way to go. Electricity is still just a sub-set of all energy consumption. Converting our electron supply system entirely to green power is half or less the battle.

And Gore has left out some critical pieces of the puzzle. Most important is his avoidance of the massive industry-sponsored relapse toward nuke power, an absurd diversion that could make the transition to a carbon-free world financially impossible and ecologically moot.

Gore’s primary focus, of course, is on climate change. He has been remarkably effective in convincing the world that it’s a major problem.

His thorough and persuasive “Inconvenient Truth” was long on scary facts, but slim on solutions. Most of them, stacked at the end of the film, focused on things individuals can do to trim their energy use.

These were helpful but marginal, because they largely omitted corporate responsibility for causing these problems.

Now Gore seems willing to acknowledge that large corporations — including electric utility companies — are at least somewhere near the core of the problem. How far he’s willing to take that analysis, and what he’s willing to do about it, remain to be seen. He is, after all, a lifelong inside player with an apparent aversion to acting outside the box (most critically in the catastrophic lack of a meaningful response to the theft of the 2000 election).

It’s thus extremely problematic that Gore continues to publicly avoid the issue of nuclear power. There are those who believe he remains essentially pro-nuclear, as he was earlier in his career. In that, he followed his father, US Senator Al Gore, Sr. (D-TN), a very pivotal early backer of atomic energy.

But just prior to the 2000 election, then-Vice President Gore wrote me a letter (posted at www.nirs.org) firmly renouncing atomic energy as a possible solution to global warming. Apparently due largely to his efforts, nukes were not included in the Kyoto Accords as a route to be taken for reducing carbon emissions. This was huge victory for the safe energy movement.

But Gore’s stance on building new reactors today has not been part of the public dialog. If the issue is mentioned on his web site, I couldn’t find it. Just prior to this week’s speech, he apparently told the Associated Press that he expects reactor generation to stay at “current levels.” But does that mean it will continue to account for about 20% of our overall electric consumption, or does it mean the same gross amount will be produced? Would that require building new reactors, or expanding the capacity of existing ones, or none of the above?

Privately, I am told that Gore now opposes atomic energy, including new reactors. But if so, his public silence — and lack of action– is deafening, incongruous, and ultimately unsustainable.

For example, his web site lauds Florida Governor Charlie Crist for taking various steps to fight carbon emissions. But Crist now enthusiastically supports forcing Florida ratepayers to foot the bill for four new reactors — while they are being built! The cost estimates for these plants have more than doubled in the last year. Their would-be builders refuse to give the Public Service Commission a firm price, with margins of fluctuation at a staggering 50% and more. Should they be completed in, say, ten or fifteen years, they are likely to cost Florida ratepayers a minimum of $50 billion, far and away the largest public works project in the SunShine state’s history (which could net at least as much power from a $50 billion investment in green energy and efficiency).

By contrast, the “huge” buy-out of some 185,000 acres of sugar company land aimed at saving the Everglades is to cost less than $2 billion, a mere 1/25ths of the proposed nuke tab, which has gotten virtually no state-wide scrutiny or public debate. Fittingly, mere construction of two of the proposed reactors, at Turkey Point, would utterly decimate the southern reaches of the Everglades National Park long before the first ray of radiation could be produced there.

A major root of the Solartopian vision of an Earth totally free of fossil and nuclear fuels dates back to the 1975 “Toward Tomorrow Fair” at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. Featuring, among others, the work of wind pioneer William Heronemus and efficiency guru Amory Lovins, the gathering joined the vision of a totally green-powered Earth with the rise of the grassroots No Nukes movement.

The tens of thousands of us who took the fight to reactors at places like Seabrook, New Hampshire and Diablo Canyon, California, still carry a clear image of an Earth that must be entirely powered by natural sources that are sustainable and pollution-free. It’s critical to remember that our success has been substantial, and that the 1000 nukes promised by Richard Nixon in 1974 were held to 104 operating now. Had even more social capital been sunk into this failed technology, our task would be even more difficult than it is now. We have no way of knowing how many Three Mile Islands and Chernobyls were avoided along the way.

The Solartopian transition still demands an end not merely to fossil fuel consumption, but the rapid phase-out of the rest of these reactors. They are unsafe, unreliable, unsustainable and indefensible against terror or error. Their fuel cycle is a significant source of global warming gases, and they emit very substantial quantities of heat into the atmosphere and the rivers, lakes and oceans they use for cooling. They cannot guarantee against catastrophic emissions, and thus cannot get private insurance. They are absurdly expensive to build, and getting moreso. They cannot compete with renewables, which are getting rapidly cheaper.

Indeed, construction of new nukes can only proceed with massive infusions of taxpayer and ratepayer money. Draining this social capital away from the transition to truly green Solartopian technologies could be devastating.

Which means that sooner or later, if he really wants to have a lasting impact, Al Gore must join us in publicly, forcefully opposing nuclear power. It is significant that he now advocates a rapid transition to green electricity, with all its economic, employment, ecological and national security benefits.

But if that’s really going to happen, new nuke construction must be stopped, and the old reactors must be phased out as rapidly as possible.

Al Gore is a welcome and powerful force in this long-term campaign to save the planet. To really help tip the balance, he must take the jump into the No Nukes fight with both feet. As befits a Nobel Prize Winner, he might even have them dragged off a construction site or two.

Harvey Wasserman’s SOLARTOPIA! OUR GREEN-POWERED EARTH, is at http://www.solartopia.org. He helped coin the phrase No Nukes, and helped co-found Musicians United for Safe Energy. This article first appeared at http://www.freepress.org.


6 Comments so far
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Wasserman, huh that sounds like a jew name. Solar power more economical than nuke? I don’t think so. What does electricity have to do with energy independence anyhow? Most of our electricity comes from coal and nuclear power all of which is produced locally. So we already are energy independent as far electricity goes.

What we really need is oil. Gasoline. Guess what? There are no substitutes, except for coal. We could run this entire country off coal. We can even make gasoline, diesel and jet fuel out of coal. That and we have a bunch of coal.

Maybe if we forget about these silly pipe dreams like wind and solar, which have never been adopted by a free market because they are terrible power sources and can never be anything more than a suppliment to a base load, which is why no country on earth gets more than 20% of its power at any one time from these sources, and even that is being extremely generous.

Nuclear, hydro and geothermal (in select locations) are the only practical carbon free sources of power. This would free up coal, shale and natural gas for fuel production.

Best thing that we can do is to tell the government to get out of the energy business, because they come up with the really stupid ideas like wind and solar which do nothing but cost a lot of money and don’t work. Central Planning did not work for the Soviets and its not working for us either. Do not listen to Jews. Everything they say is a lie.

Comment by Johnnyb

Dear John,

What does it matter if Mr. Wasserman is a Jew? Do you have something against Jewish people? I don’t feel the same way you do and judge people just because they have a different religon than me, a different race than me, or speak a different langauge than me. Maybe you should try developing an open mind and do some research on the subject. I will be the first one to admit that I have so much to learn about many important issues facing our country.

I do not support Nuclear Power. I do not think it is safe for a couple reasons. 1. It is an easy target 2. We haven’t found a safe way to despose of the waste.

Coal is bad for the environment. The coal is in the acid rain which falls and is deadly on rivers, lakes, air, land, plants, etc. It is bad for our health and our children’s health.

Sun, Wind and the ocean can provide renewable energy. Still is still alot I have to learn on the subject, but renewables are the future!!!! I think we need to invest in the future and don’t be so oposed to trying new avenues.

I just posted a couple of clips from youtube that talks about renewable energy which I found very interesting. I will continue to try and expand my posts on this issue in my journal. I really want to learn more and maybe other people would like to know more on this subject to so that is why I will post things.

I am posting this recent speech and hope that you will listen to it with an open mind.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T-qgX5LQ4w4&feature=related
Robert F. Kennedy Jr Part One

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dy2Uv9N8nFg&feature=related
Robert F Kennedy Jr Part Two

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D7jOAZ_Xptw&feature=related
Robert F. Kennedy Jr Part Three

Do you trust the big Oil Companies to tell you the American public the whole truth and nothing but the truth? I don’t!!!!!

Do you really think that the large multi-National corporations that you don’t want any government control have only your best interest at heart and should be given free reign? I would hope not.

John, please open your mind and look at all sides of the story.

Comment by chrisy58

Nuclear power is the only energy source available that is low carbon emitting and powerful enough to do the heavy lifting. Gore’s apparent opposition to nuclear power has forced me to with draw my support of his organization. I have been commenting on nuclear power for years. I have yet to find people who oppose the use of nuclear power for the generation of electricity who end up playing with a full deck. This is the greenest and most natural form of energy there is. The technology for harnessing this power has improved, the waste stream has and continues to be deminished. We will all be very glad we have kept the waste that has been generated around, Np is one of the most problematic reactor products, it is also fissile and easily extracted from spent fuel rods, We will get GW of power out of the Np and Pu now sitting at your local power plant with very little energy expended in its re-processing. There are several reactor designs that specifically burn down waste as a means of generatiing power, one of which is only a few years away from deployment in current commercial reactors.

The opposition to nuclear power DOES NOT support alternatives such as wind and solar. This is not a matter of opinion, not everything is a matter of opinion. This is a matter of science. Wind suffers from extremely low density power generation and from intermittency. Holding hands and chanting or billions of dollars in research will not change this. We have reached the top of the engineering curve. It is also not begnin and carbon free and it is expensive on a per kilowatt basis. Solar is even worse on all these factors. The opposition to nuclear power primarily supports one industry and that is the coal industry. I started keeping track of anti-nuclar blog sites and not too surprisingly, most had advertising for “clean coal.” As soon as I heard Gore say this Orwellian catch phrase it was all over for me. Life is full of choices, some of them are nasty, like when not to treat a cancer, others are not so bad, like should I eat a nice fillet of sole with steamed vegitables, or should I eat grule and rotten spinach? Nuclear power vs coal is the later kind of choice.

A 1 GW coal plant will eat over 100 million tons of coal a year. Forget about CO2. Forget about all the fuel it takes to literally move a mountain top and deposit into the adjacent valley and then turn the coal mine into a green field. Forget about how much power it takes to transport 100 million tons of anything across the country. This is all a minor point. Coal is full of a witches brew of heavy metals. Ever wonder why that Fillet of Sole you just chose shouldn’t be eaten too many times a week if you are pregnent? Mercury. 40% of all envrionmental mercury contamination comes from coal fired electricity. That 1 GW plant will also throw 20,000 pounds of uranium into the atmosphere, along with a similar amount of Thorium which poses a similar threat for causing mesothelioma as abspestos. There is also chromium, another carcinogen, arsenic, lead, copper, hetercyclic hydrocarbons, microparticulates, acid rain components.

Nuclear power, instead of having huge trainloads of fuel arrive at its fuel yard every thrid day has a truck that comes through its gates every 18 months. A fuel assembly is off loaded and replaces a third of the fuel in the reactor core. This is about the mass of a Hummer, or maybe a bit less. That is the total mass of the assembly, not just the fuel. The fuel is in the form of small ceramic pellets the size of the last joint on you little finger (if you are s child). The pellets are maintained within zerconium metal cylinders that are welded together. This entire assmebly is placed under 20 meters of water for a few years to allow the most radioactive material to decay. Once this has occured, the waste can be placed in dry storage. This waste was generated producing power for an part of a state. We know where it is. It is fixed within ceramic inside metal tubes inside of containment cilinders that can easily withstand 80 mile an hour crashes into concrete walls. This knowledge is very specific, unlike the more general knowledge of where coal waste is, saying it is in the environment and food chain isn’t very specific or comforting.

As I said before, one of the most problimatic of the long term waste products in fuel rods is Neptunium. Everyone reading this post has this element in their homes, if they are not breaking the law. The ionization chamber of the smoke detector (S) on a ceiling in your home contains unfixed Americium-241. This decays by alpha emission into Neptunium-237. This is exactly the same isotope that poses the greatest concern for long term waste storage. Smoke detectors contain approximately 0.2 mg of Am-241 and in 500 years half of this will be Np-237, in land fills all around the industiral world. Add up the number of homes in the US, multiply by 0.2 and this probably adds up to kilograms of Np-237 in land fills. Is this a good idea? probably not. People get their panties in a twist about things the pose little danger and may actually be helpful, and in doing so bring about greater dangers. This is very certainly the case with nuclear power, animal research, irradiation of produce, support for biofuels and wind power. It all is just both silly and depressingly stupid.

GE is one of the biggest proponents of Wind power, do you really thing that GE has your best interest at heart? Or, since the are supporting something that your flawed common sense has told you is good for you, then it is all right, they must just be a good company, like when the completely fouled the Hudson river with PCBs.

BP and Chevron are pushing alternatives as straw man opponents. Just look at the first and second laws of thermodynamics before trying to make any judgement on any issue of energy policy. It is always sad to run into people with opinions such as this because it is like putting a bright highlighter line over the statistics that claim we are failing in science education in this country

Comment by Ken

Dear Ken,

I found this clip that I thought was very good and said a lot of the things that I would like to say. I hope you will watch it with an open mind.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tub1ROKTmzo
Greenwash of the Week: Going Nuclear

I do not think GE has my best interests at heart. Just because they say they support wind power doesn’t mean that I forget all the damage they have done. Not only did they pollute the Hudson they polluted rivers in Massachusetts where I used to live as well. I believe Ge is supporting Wind because they know that it is the future and they don’t want to be left out of any profit to be made. It is for their own best interests they support Wind. So because Ge supports wind it makes wind power bad?

Comment by chrisy58

Great blog entry Chrisy.

After all the end of the world doom and gloom, it is nice to see people (Gore, T Boon Pickens, Andrew Grove) proposing solutions. These first rounds of solutions may not be perfect but they are going in the right direction. We need a reliable, cleaner power grid not only to power our growing needs but also to ‘fuel’ our transportation needs when Plug-in hybrids hit the mass market.

Comment by CelticSolar

Celtic,

Thank you for your nice comment. As you said it is great to see people put forward soltuions.

I also agree that we need a new and inproved power grid in this country as the one we do have is very out of date.

I still have a lot to learn on this issue, and hopefully this blog will help in not only educating me but others as well. Have a great day!!!

Chrisy

Comment by chrisy58




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