Cleantech Experts On Romney’s Energy Plan: ‘A Political Document Not Worth Serious Analysis’
Source: Bostinno/Think Progress
by Walter Frick, via BostInno
The central energy challenge we face as a nation and a planet is the transition away from fossil fuels, which contribute to climate change, to clean sources of energy. The most important debates in this area concern just how quickly this must be accomplished and how to do it in the cheapest way possible. Last week Mitt Romneys campaign released its energy plan, which completely ignores all of this.
Instead, the plan focuses on the goal of North American energy independence by 2020 through expanded fossil fuel production. Unfortunately, as Michael Levi, an energy policy expert at the Council on Foreign Relations, writes in a review of the plan for Foreign Policy, achieving energy independence through expanded supplies is a pipe dream. You can read his review to find out why. I want to focus on the plans dismissal of clean energy.
The Romney Plans Only Mention of Clean Energy
The only mention of clean energy comes in the plans Innovation section, where it states support for basic research into new energy technologies, and notes that expanded development should apply equally to all sources. Theres no way to read this as anything except a commitment to drastically scale back existing clean energy programs like tax credits, applied research, and funding for commercialization. The terms climate change and global warming are totally absent.
Read more: http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2012/08/30/774851/cleantech-experts-on-romneys-energy-plan-a-political-document-not-worth-serious-analysis/