Sep 2 2010

Digging Into Conservative Misconceptions of Energy Costs

solar energy costs

Here is an excellent guest post by an energy veteran and businessman on the costs of clean energy compared to old, dirty energy.

We’ve been writing on clean energy more and more these days. It is clearly one way to address global climate change, air pollution, and water pollution. And with another offshore oil production facility catching fire today, the sense of urgency to switch over from “dirty” to “clean” energy is growing.

In this guest post from Tom Rooney, President and CEO of SPG Solar in Novato, California we get a deeper look into the real costs of energy. Tom has been on CSPAN and Fox Business News recently, and his commentaries have been “in the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Miami Herald and hundreds of papers in between.”

As an intro to this story, Tom wrote this to me:

Conservatives get it wrong on energy because they are wrong on the costs of energy.

Including the usually reliable folks who write the editorials for the Wall Street Journal.

In a recent editorial, the WSJ condemned solar energy as “premature and speculative.” This editorial appeared a few months after the paper’s parent company announced plans to build one of the larger solar facilities in the country.

This disconnect about costs is why I wrote this commentary for the Planetsave.

Enjoy the post below (with a little emphasis, subheadings, and a few links added by me).


Tom Rooney solarBy Tom Rooney

Conservatives, let’s talk about energy. And why so many conservatives are so wrong — so liberal, even — on wind and solar energy.

Let’s start with a recent editorial from the home of “free markets and free people,” the Wall Street Journal. Photovoltaic solar energy, quoth the mavens, is a “speculative and immature technology that costs far more than ordinary power.”

So few words, so many misconceptions. It pains me to say that because, like many business leaders, I grew up on the Wall Street Journal and still depend on it.

But I cannot figure out why people who call themselves “conservatives” would say solar or wind power is “speculative.” Conservatives know that word is usually reserved to criticize free-market activity that is not approved by well, you know who.

Solar and Wind Energy Is Being Used NOW

Today, around the world, more than a million people work in the wind and solar business. Many more receive their power from solar.

Solar is not a cause, it is a business with real benefits for its customers.

Just ask anyone who installed their solar systems five years ago. Today, many of their systems are paid off and they are getting free energy. Better still, ask the owners of one of the oldest and most respected companies in America who recently announced plans to build one of the largest solar facilities in the country.

That would be Dow Jones, owners of the Wall Street Journal.

Now we come to “immature.” Again, the meaning is fuzzy. But in Germany, a country 1/3 our size in area and population, they have more solar than the United States. This year, Germans will build enough solar to equal the output of three nuclear power plants.

What they call immaturity our clients call profit-making leadership.

Energy Costs

But let’s get to the real boogie man: The one that “costs far more than ordinary power.”

I’ve been working in energy infrastructure for 25 years and I have no idea what the WSJ means by the words “ordinary power.” But, after spending some time with Milton Friedman, whom I met on many occasions while studying for an MBA at the University of Chicago, I did learn about costs.

And here is what every freshman at the University of Chicago knows: There is a difference between cost and price.

Solar relies on price supports from the government. Fair enough — though its price is falling even faster than fossil fuels are rising.

But if Friedman were going to compare the costs of competing forms of energy, he also would have wanted to know the cost of “ordinary energy.” Figured on the same basis. This is something the self-proclaimed conservative opponents of solar refuse to do.

But huge companies including Wall Mart, IBM, Target and Los Gatos Tomatoes figured it out. And last year so did the National Academy of Sciences. It produced a report on the Hidden Costs of Energy that documented how coal was making people sick to the tune of $63 billion a year.

And that oil and natural gas had so many tax breaks and subsidies that were so interwoven for so long, it was hard to say exactly how many tens of billions these energy producers received courtesy of the U.S. Taxpayer.

Just a few weeks ago, the International Energy Agency said worldwide, fossil fuels receive $550 billion in subsidies a year — 12 times what alternatives such as wind and solar get.

Neither report factored in Global Warming or the cost of sending our best and bravest into harm’s way to protect our energy supply lines.

Whatever that costs, you know it starts with a T.

All this without hockey stick graphs, purloined emails or junk science.

When you compare the real costs of solar with the fully loaded real costs of coal and oil and natural gas and nuclear power, apples to apples, solar is cheaper.

That’s not conservative. Or liberal. That comes from an ideology older and more reliable than both of those put together: Arithmetic.

Top Photo Credit: SkipSteuart via flickr



Aug 30 2010

The Secret Life of the Sun (Slideshow)

coronal mass ejections intro photo Photo via MinnPost We rely on the sun for everything from powering up our electronics to basic heat and warmth for survival, but this massive star does more than just send light our way: It's a huge nuclear reactor with explosions, eruptions, storms, and magnetic fields that affect both itself and Earth. Check out our slideshow for stunning space photos of the solar flares, spicules, coronal mass ejections, and other jaw-dropping phenomena that make the sun one of the most fascinating parts of our s...Read the full story on TreeHugger

Aug 23 2010

Cool Green Morning: Monday, August 23

It’s just another cool green Monday…

  1. Heading back to school?  Ask Umbra offers tips for eco-friendly school fundraisers and green college experiences, respectively.  (Grist)
  2. Algae blooms as viewed from space=beautiful!  (Wired)
  3. Self-cleaning technology used in missions to Mars may now keep solar panels sparkly clean.  (CleanTechnica)
  4. This rotating solar home (?!) generates five times more energy than it uses.  (EcoGeek)
  5. In not super-surprising news, bike- and pedestrian-friendly cities have lower rates of obesity, researchers say.  What benefits the health of the environment often benefits us, too!  (Treehugger)

Aug 21 2010

Green Living, Clean Energy, and Green Activism News of the Week

obama-organic-golf-course

Here’s our latest roundup of green living, green activism, and clean energy news. Enjoy these great stories from around the internet.

Green Living Tips

Want to know how to clean your house in an eco-friendly way? Vera Mosley over at sustainablog has a few good tips in her recent post, “Eco Cleaning Your Home: Essential Tips That Can Also Keep Your Children Safe.” Check that out to make sure you are cleaning your house in an eco-friendly way that is also safe for your children.

organic swimming pool bionova natural

Ok, yeah, by now everyone has heard of organic food, but have you heard of organic swimming pools? A very cool story (with pics) over on the CalFinder Remodeling blog this week looks at eco-friendly or “organic” swimming pools, which are apparently growing in popularity (and for good reason).

Golf courses are one of my development or land use pet peeves, because they are generally horrible for the environment and yet often get counted as “green spaces” by municipalities. Apparently, some are now trying to be a bit “greener” (environmentally speaking) and Obama recently went golfing on what is supposed to be “the only completely organic golf course in the United States.” Jeff McIntire-Strasburg over at the Sundance Channel’s SUNfiltered blog discusses some of the environmental issues of golf courses and asks if this organic golf course is really green, or if it is greenwashing.

Clean Tech News

Want to read some positive U.S. news? If so, head on over to the CalFinder Solar blog and read an uplifting story on a new Illinois law that will create 5,000 new solar energy jobs and help the state and its utilities meet their renewable energy targets. Nice stuff!

Green Activism News

To start off the activism news, the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) highlighted the great global activism that built up around a proposed coal-fired power plant in Scotland last week. “The proposal is the only live application for new coal-fired power station in the UK. Although the developers claim it is a clean-coal development, in reality 80 per cent of emissions would go straight into the atmosphere adding to global climate change,” WWF wrote. Nearly 10,000 people from 100 countries came together to oppose the power plant.

Mountaintop-Removal-Mining-petition

On the other side of the Atlantic, Becky Striepe, writing over on greenUPGRADER, highlighted the depressing news that the EPA recently issued another mountaintop removal coal mining permit in the Appalachian Mountains and directed us to a petition hosted by the Rainforest Action Network (RAN) to tell the EPA that we are disappointed with this action and don’t want to see anymore of the Appalachian Mountains destroyed by mountaintop removal. Go sign the petition TODAY here.

Prince Charles of Wales Sustainability Tour

Royal Prince Charles gone activist is too sweet a story to skip. Bonnie Alter of TreeHugger reported recently that Prince Charles is going on tour to promote sustainable living! This is actually not a big surprise, since Prince Charles has been a strong proponent of sustainable development for awhile, but great to see him doing this! “In his travels he will be visiting projects around the country where ordinary people are making a difference by installing solar panels, planting trees and growing vegetables. It is part of HRH Start project, which promotes a more sustainable lifestyle,” Bonnie reported.

We wrote on the largest state in India banning plastic bags recently. Now, the richest Hindu temple in the world (with around 60,000 visitors a day) is taking it a step further. Matthew McDermott, also writing on TreeHugger, reported (a little over a week ago, I must admit) that ALL plastic will be banned from it soon. The state government of Andhra Pradesh is actually the governing body that decided on the ban. Cool move, Andhra Pradesh!

That’s it for our green living, clean energy, and green activism roundup this week. I’m not sure yet if we will get a roundup out next weekend, since I will be on vacation. But perhaps someone else will be interested in picking up this job.

Photo Credits: The White House via Flickr; bionovanaturalpoolsNational Memorial for the Mountains via flickr; the Prince of Wales



Aug 17 2010

Land Art Meets Clean Energy In 5,000 MW-Generating Desert Sculpture

LightSanctuary1.jpgImages: Decker Yeadon LLC Contrary to popular belief, green energy doesn't have to be ugly, so it's encouraging when we see architects, landscape designers, artists, engineers and scientists working together to transform large projects that could be potential eyesores into works of wonder. We have some estimates of how much of the earth's surfaces might be needed by 2030 ...Read the full story on TreeHugger

Aug 16 2010

Cool Green Morning: Monday, August 16

It’s the start of another cool green week:

  1. Sad news for the Rothschild’s giraffe–  it’s officially endangered.  (Mongabay)
  2. Ask Umbra explores the ecological impact of milk.  (Grist)
  3. Will this summer’s crazy weather spur the world to action on climate change?  (Guardian Eco)
  4. If you live in New Jersey (this writer’s home state, and arguably the greatest state in the entire United States), a solar roof could earn you cold, hard cash.  (CleanTechnica)
  5. The Sierra Club ranked the nation’s greenest college campuses– did yours make the list?  (Green)