John Coviello wrote:

I have no doubts anymore that we now have the technology to eliminate most of our use of oil. From wind to solar to geothermal to waste to energy to advanced batteries. We could do it over a period of a decade or less with the proper investments.

I think that has been true since the mid 1970s. The only question has been the cost. It would be cheaper now than ever before, but still expensive.

It is interesting to see how much environmentalists have changed their minds about which form of alternative energy is best. Take this book I have here: Robert Stroh bow and Daniel Yergin, "Energy Future -- Report to the Energy Project at the Harvard Business School," (Ballantine, 1979), 493 pages. Yergin is still respected expert. The blurb on the cover says, "Heroic . . . a truly magnificent book." -- Wall Street Journal. This book has a lot of useful information, but it devotes hundreds of pages to things like solar PV chips and biofuel, and it includes exactly three references to "windmills" (not turbines -- even though they do not mill anything):

1. Windmills are listed in one table.

2. There is a parenthetical statement about "small windmills," -- claiming they have no future. (I agree)

3. A statement near the conclusion: "Congress should fund prototype versions of the centralized electric technologies (power towers, solar satellites, ocean thermal, large win machines), and . . . commit substantial funds to photovoltaics and energy plantation research and development." Good thing we did not follow that advice!

Based on this, I would say we should not listen to environmentalists when it comes to energy policy and alternative energy. Scientists also have a poor track record. Modern wind power began when backyard hippie enthusiasts in Denmark began building wind turbines, and engineers took it from there. So we should listen to lunatic fringe backyard inventors and engineers.

In point of fact, no one should try to pick the best source of alternative energy. The only practical way to do this would be to let unfettered free market competition decide the issue. That is something the Bush administration will never allow. They have tilted the playing field 45° in favor of fossil fuel and nuclear power. They talk like capitalists but they act like socialists -- their creed is socialism for wealthy people and rich corporations. If we must have socialism I would prefer to have the old-fashioned kind that at least tries to enfranchise poor people. They need the money more than Enron did.

- Jed



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