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Environment & Energy
In reply to the discussion: "The battle of the energy titans comes down to one great contest: nuclear vs. coal." [View all]OKIsItJustMe
(21,875 posts)37. Uh… take it up with the people who were there
http://www.energybulletin.net/node/9657
[font face="Times, Serif"][font size="5"]Was Jimmy Carter right?[/font]
by Stephen Koff
"In June or July of 1981, on the bleakest day of my professional life, they descended on the Solar Energy Research Institute, fired about half of our staff and all of our contractors, including two people who went on to win Nobel prizes in other fields, and reduced our $130 million budget by $100 million," recalls Denis Hayes, the founder of Earth Day, who had been hired by Carter to spearhead the solar initiative.
Reagan and Congress stopped aggressively pushing new auto efficiency standards, acceding to Detroit's desire to leave them at Carter-era levels. They let the solar tax benefit expire, and the nascent solar industry went belly-up.
Solar-energy champions say such a boost was needed 20 years ago, as the Carter tax credits were expiring. "The solar water heating industry instantly went from a billion-dollar industry to an industry that now installs, in the U.S., about 6,000 solar hot water heaters a year," said Noah Kaye, spokesman for the Solar Energy Industries Association.
Had Reagan not squashed it, the research that Carter started could have triggered a substantial shift to solar, wind power and other renewable forms of energy - possibly providing as much as 25 percent of the nation's electricity supply, says Hayes, the Carter solar expert.
[/font]
by Stephen Koff
"In June or July of 1981, on the bleakest day of my professional life, they descended on the Solar Energy Research Institute, fired about half of our staff and all of our contractors, including two people who went on to win Nobel prizes in other fields, and reduced our $130 million budget by $100 million," recalls Denis Hayes, the founder of Earth Day, who had been hired by Carter to spearhead the solar initiative.
Reagan and Congress stopped aggressively pushing new auto efficiency standards, acceding to Detroit's desire to leave them at Carter-era levels. They let the solar tax benefit expire, and the nascent solar industry went belly-up.
Solar-energy champions say such a boost was needed 20 years ago, as the Carter tax credits were expiring. "The solar water heating industry instantly went from a billion-dollar industry to an industry that now installs, in the U.S., about 6,000 solar hot water heaters a year," said Noah Kaye, spokesman for the Solar Energy Industries Association.
Had Reagan not squashed it, the research that Carter started could have triggered a substantial shift to solar, wind power and other renewable forms of energy - possibly providing as much as 25 percent of the nation's electricity supply, says Hayes, the Carter solar expert.
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"The battle of the energy titans comes down to one great contest: nuclear vs. coal." [View all]
wtmusic
Dec 2011
OP
Where is the scientific analysis that concludes "renewables are...not enough on their own"?
kristopher
Dec 2011
#4
I didn't provide a scientific analysis of the deficiencies inherent in billions of hamster wheels
wtmusic
Dec 2011
#19
Only shills for the nuclear industry say that energy choice is limited to either coal or nukes.
diane in sf
Dec 2011
#6
98.7% of the energy now used by is destroying the future of 100% of life on this planet.
GliderGuider
Dec 2011
#11
I believe the DoE figure (100 miles × 100 miles) relates to electical needs only
OKIsItJustMe
Dec 2011
#78
Here are articles with a non-mainstream view of various aspects of the global eco-clusterfuck.
GliderGuider
Dec 2011
#26
..reduce energy consumption, material consumption, our numbers and overall activity levels by 85%..
Ghost Dog
Dec 2011
#33
The thing is, oil will become unaffordable a decade or two before the aquifers are depleted.
joshcryer
Dec 2011
#84
Speaking strictly of TVs, your choice of tv can mean up to 70% energy savings (Chart)
txlibdem
Dec 2011
#28