http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=15795

Do We Need Another Sun Day?

By Diane MacEachern, AlterNet
May 1, 2003

Twenty-five years ago this May 3, as the sun crossed the 
International Date Line in Auckland, New Zealand, a small band of 
solar energy enthusiasts rose early to usher in what they hoped would 
be the dawning of a new energy era powered exclusively by the sun. As 
what activists call "the only safe nuclear reactor" arced across the 
globe, hundreds of events in dozens of nations cascaded one after the 
other, ranging from the spectacular to the sublime. The Citizens 
Energy Research Institute in Tokyo built a full-scale wind generator 
in Japan. Photovoltaic cells powered an electric pump and light bulbs 
in Sweden. A five-mile long "solar clothes dryer" was strung between 
Miami and Key Biscayne. By the end of the day, almost 30 million 
people in 2,000 communities in the United States and 31 countries 
around the world had celebrated Sun Day.

President Carter caught solar fever, boosting America's solar budget 
by $100 million, installing a solar hot water system on the White 
House and declaring that the United States should obtain 25 percent 
of its energy from solar, wind and other renewable energy resources 
by the year 2000. But as soon as he became president, Ronald Reagan 
suffered an immediate sun stroke. Within six months of occupying 1600 
Pennsylvania Avenue, he yanked the solar panels off the White House, 
cut the solar budget over 70 percent, and allowed solar tax credits 
to lapse that encouraged homeowners to install active and passive 
solar systems on their houses. Subsequent presidents never revived 
President Carter's vision for a solar future. Clinton ballyhooed a 
million solar roof initiative, but failed to bring the idea to 
fruition. Most Americans don't realize that President George W. 
Bush's much touted hydrogen car initiative is actually siphoning 
funding out of geothermal, biomass and other important solar programs 
in a classic case of robbing Peter to pay Paul.

In this age of climate change, terrorist attacks, and ongoing 
concerns about air and water pollution, there should be far greater 
support at the federal level for solar power, a non-polluting, secure 
and infinitely abundant domestic energy source. Instead, we spend $30 
billion a year just to defend our stake in Middle Eastern oil fields, 
and that was before the recent war with Iraq.

Ralph Nader once said, "If the oil companies owned the sun, we'd have 
solar by now."

Amazingly, in the last 25 years, solar has managed to become a viable 
energy option even though the oil companies don't own the sun and the 
federal government hasn't been on solar's side, at least in this 
country. Globally, new renewable energy helps meet the energy needs 
of more than 300 million people. Wind power, one of the most 
accessible forms of solar energy, is on the rise, with the world 
using ten times as much wind energy as it did only a decade ago. 
Since 1996, global shipments of photovoltaic cells, which convert 
sunlight to electricity, have increased at an average annual rate of 
33 percent.

Still, barriers to truly widespread acceptance of solar energy are 
severe, not the least of which is price. Generating costs for 
electricity from photovoltaics range from 25 cents to $1 per kilowatt 
hour, which is extremely high compared to electricity generated by 
coal or nuclear power plants. Says Scott Sklar, executive director of 
the Solar Energy Industries Association from 1986 to 2000, "If just 
once we could devote just one third of the $30 billion spent 
defending Middle East oil fields to commercializing photovoltaics, 
they'd become three to five times cheaper ... and that much more 
accessible in the marketplace."

In some quarters, the Bush Administration is being accused of having 
waged the war in Iraq in order to gain access to that country's oil 
fields as a way of meeting America's ever-increasing energy demands. 
War or not, continued dependence on foreign petroleum, and determined 
reliance on environmentally troublesome domestic energy sources like 
coal and nuclear power do not bode well for any nation that strives 
for energy independence, national security, and a healthy 
environment. On this 25th anniversary of Sun Day, the time seems 
right for our national leaders to revisit the solar goals set on May 
3, 1978 and dedicate themselves anew to a sunny, renewable future.

Diane MacEachern is the author of "Save Our Planet: 750 Everyday Ways 
You Can Help Clean Up The Earth" and "Enough is Enough - How to 
Organize a Successful Campaign for Change." She writes about the 
environment from her passive solar home in Takoma Park, Md.

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