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Al Gore's pseudo-ecology strikes again
Submitted by Bill Weinberg on Thu, 07/17/2008 - 19:07.
The insidious thing about Al Gore is that he superficially sounds pretty good to environmentalists—so much so, that his ideas are even blasted as extremism by right-wing idiots. But if you scratch them, there is always less there than meets the eye. Let's examine. From the NY Times, July 16:
OK, for starters, preserving "the United States of America as we know it" (with all those "creature comforts," as the Times extrapolates, presumably including SUVs) is presented as the incentive to address the problem—rather than the source of the problem itself.
Note the failure to define terms here. "Carbon-free" is pretty clear, but "renewable" and (especially) "clean" are considerbaly less so. For instance, does this include nuclear?
The call to "entrepreneurs" implicitly assumes that capitalist solutions are possible—as if good ol' American ingenuity alone can break open a market dominated by the globe-spanning energy cartel of Exxon and their ilk.
There you go again. Exxon sells oil, not sunlight. Waiting for the corporate fat-cats to suddenly get on board with unhooking the economy from the commodity they sell is a perfect recipe for global holocaust. But of course we can't talk about massive public intervention in the market—that's been taboo in this country since the goddam Reagan "revolution."
OK, that's a start. But note that Gore is only talking about electricity generation here—not automotive transportation. Check out this chart from the Energy Department, "U.S. Primary Energy Consumption by Source and Sector, 2007." 70% of petroleum burned in the US is for transportation, and only 2% for electric power. 91% of the coal is burned for electric power, but coal constitutes only 22.8% of total US energy sources, compared to oil's 39.8%. So leaving out the cult of the automobile barely even begins to address the problem. And that's a lot trickier, as it means a massive overhauling of the country's basic infrastructure and the physical lay-out of our urban areas. The effort behind the Apollo program doesn't come close to what's needed. The better analogy might be FDR's massive rural electrification projects and the World War II-era self-sufficiency drive... Progress which was massively reversed in the post-war suburban boom, the dismantling of mass transit, construction of the Interstate system, etc. As for coal, here's a relevant passage from the Energy Department's "Electric Power" page:
Note that the problem here is explicitly posed in terms of propaganda—"remov[ing] the environmental objections" (emphasis added). In other words, removing the sulfur and greenhouse gases is merely a means to the propaganda end of removing the "objections." All of this indicates the self-limiting nature of how (as George Lakoff says) the debate has been "framed." Anything not to upset corporate power. Even with the stakes as high as the "future of human civilization." See our last post on global climate destabilization. |
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