Can Renewable Technologies Provide U.S. Electricity Needs? (Only hypothetically, using unrealistic assumptions)

By Mary Hutzler -- April 7, 2009 6 Comments

Several reports (see here and here) and certain websites (here) allege that renewable technologies can meet our growing electricity needs and also meet stringent reduction targets for carbon dioxide. For example, Climate Progress, a website populated by Joseph Romm, an assistant secretary of energy during the Clinton administration, indicates that the answer to our growing electricity needs will come from energy efficiency (including cogeneration), wind power, concentrated solar power (CSP), and biomass co-firing, which taken together will meet a projected 1 percent annual growth rate in demand while also reducing carbon emissions.

These reports are in sharp contrast to forecasts produced by the Energy Information Administration (EIA), an independent agency of the U.S. Department of Energy.…

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Green Jobs: Making Society Poorer (Basic math can show interesting things)

By Donald Hertzmark -- April 6, 2009 6 Comments

A key element of the current administration’s approach to recovery from our current economic and financial crises is a fundamental reorientation of the kinds of work performed in our economy. But a proposed shift to “green” jobs in the name of well-paying, high-impact employment that cannot be outsourced overlooks the essential nature of how human labor fosters economic well-being.

Simply put, the key to prosperity is high productivity per worker. There is simply no other way to be rich unless you sit on top of a gold mine (or oil well) and have few mouths that need to feed off that source of wealth.

Discarding the vain hope that a nation of 300 million can live well off a raw materials-based economy, we are left with productivity as the wellspring of affluence.…

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Conference of the Century! (Fantasizing about a 350 ppm CO2 Cap)

By -- March 30, 2009 4 Comments

Well, how else should we describe a conference addressing “The Greatest Challenge in History”? That’s what the 350 Climate Conference, to be held May 2 at Columbia University, calls global warming, which it also asserts is ”likely the greatest threat humanity has ever faced.”

The number “350? refers to the “safe upper limit” of carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations in the atmosphere–350 parts per million (ppm)–according to NASA scientist and Columbia University professor James Hansen, who will keynote the conference. Atmospheric CO2 levels today are roughly 385 ppm.

The online conference flyer explains: …

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Pickens Plan II: Retreat as Prelude to Failure? (worth reading Sunday)

By Robert Bradley Jr. -- March 29, 2009 2 Comments

Several MasterResource posts on the problems of the original Pickens Plan, and the retreat to Pickens Plan II, are worth revisiting as T. Boone continues his multi-million-dollar quest for a government-engineered energy makeover.

Pickens, like Al Gore, does not want to debate his plan–he just wants to implement it with edicts. But fundamental problems remain with Pickens I and the scaled-back Pickens II. Here is a one-two-three punch by critics:…

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“Renewable” Energy: In Search of Definition

By -- March 28, 2009 2 Comments Continue Reading

Energy Strangulation: The Obama Game Plan Emerges

By Kenneth P. Green -- March 26, 2009 7 Comments Continue Reading

The 70s: Bad Music, Bad Hair, and Bad Energy Policy (What Obama can learn from Carter)

By Donald Hertzmark -- March 25, 2009 6 Comments Continue Reading

Progress Report: MasterResource (1Q–2009)

By Robert Bradley Jr. -- March 21, 2009 5 Comments Continue Reading

Greenish Politics in the Emerald Isle (an energy item for St. Patrick’s Day)

By Michelle Foss -- March 17, 2009 No Comments Continue Reading

Are Depressions “Green”?

By -- March 16, 2009 5 Comments Continue Reading