I am sorry, but this should have been done in 2009. What can they be possibly be thinking? The economy has been teetering on collapse for two years and here we are without enabling legislation in the one sector that a blind fool can see is the first big thing we need to do now.
The electric car is coming just as fast as possible. In five years, fossil fuel automobiles will be as obsolete as the Stanly steamer. We are going to be able to use all the power we can build out over the next five years and if there is a surplus we can always throw it into a factory somewhere.
We are now transitioning to a profoundly electrical world. When finished, even natural gas will disappear from the market.
The only thing that has held it back has been a lack of cheap dense electrical storage.
EEStor (see earlier post) has promised to deliver and I think they are most likely to pull it off first. If not them then someone else will quite shortly.
Cheap storage integration means that our installed capacity will double if not triple their deliverables almost immediately. Effectively every generator and every turbine can operate full out 24/7 if the demand is there. It really means that our power capacity can increase five to ten fold easily which is what we will need to supply our automotive needs. The cars will in fact provide most of the storage since they will charge in the off hours to take advantage of price.
Astonishingly, we may well have ample capacity for full conversion and any shortfall will be made up by geothermal, solar and wind all of which will be price takers driving out the thermal plants.
Almost Two Million US Clean Energy Jobs Lost
by Staff Writers
The analysis shows that, if left unremedied, the Senate's failure to act will cost the United States 1.9 million jobs - including 600,000 in the 10 states with joblessness in excess of 10 percent. The report documents that, in the nearly two months since the Senate failed to act, clean energy investments already have started shifting away from the United States to China and other nations.
Other key findings include the following:
+ Nearly 600,000 of the unrealized jobs were lost where they are now needed most - the 10 states with unemployment rates over 10 percent: Nevada (17,000 jobs); California (226,000); Rhode Island (8,000); Florida (78,000); South Carolina (36,000); Mississippi (19,000); Oregon (26,000); Indiana (45,000); Ohio (61,000); and Illinois (68,000).
+ Even states with lower unemployment levels lost hundreds of thousands of urgently needed new jobs, including more than 300,000 jobs in the following states: Arkansas (25,000); Maine (12,000); Massachusetts (40,000); Minnesota (38,000); Missouri (29,000); Montana (13,000); NewHampshire (7,000); New Jersey (11,000); Pennsylvania (78,000); and Virginia (50,000).
+ The lost jobs forfeited by the U.S. Senate include major categories of employment that could have put Americans to work immediately with little or no additional training or education - since a large portion of clean energy jobs require widely-held skills that millions of Americans already have.
+ The Senate's failure to take action will have even wider negative economic consequences on American families, including Americans missing out on an increase to annual household income of up to $1,175 per year, and a boost to America's gross domestic product (GDP) of up to $111 billion - with these huge economic benefits flowing across all 50 states.
American Businesses for Clean Energy Spokesperson Chris Van Atten said: "The clean energy race will go on with or without the United States . It will not wait if federal lawmakers decide to sit out the next year, three years or a decade. In the near term, the prospects for new jobs and other economic benefits from clean energy remain on the table. The U.S. Senate has already cost the United States billions of dollars in job-creating clean energy and climate-related investments. The question must be asked: How much further behind China and the rest of the world will the Senate allow America to fall in the global clean energy race?"
Small Business Majority Founder and CEO John Arensmeyer said: "Opinion polling of small business owners we conducted confirms widespread support for a comprehensive climate and clean energy bill. In this tough economy, small business owners are doing their part to reduce energy costs, invest in new technologies and create jobs, but they can't do it alone. They need the Senate to act quickly and pass clean energy policies that will reignite economic growth and put millions back to work."
Main Street Alliance Field Coordinator Jason Collette said: "These are jobs that can't be outsourced and will provide the foundation for a small business customer base and healthy local economies. There is no excuse in this tough economy for the Senate's failure to act and its failure to create these jobs."
Speaking for We Can Lead, Tim Greeff, political director, Clean Economy Network, said: "Business leaders across the United States are in a global race to lead the clean energy economy. The Senate's failure to enact comprehensive climate and energy policy has left American businesses at a competitive disadvantage which grows with each day that we delay enacting meaningful policies that will create millions of American jobs and put Americans back to work."
Thousands of U.S. businesses - including small firms in all 50 states - have gone on record as supporting comprehensive climate and clean energy legislation as the best way to maintain American competitiveness with China and other nations, and to help kick start the struggling the U.S. economy.
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