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Obama's Big Environmental Mistake

By Joshua Frank, AlterNet. Posted August 5, 2008.


With his stance on coal-to-liquid technology, Obama is following a dirty legacy first begun in Nazi Germany.
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Barack Obama seems to be following a dirty legacy when it comes to his official energy policy.

The price of oil per barrel has risen dramatically in the past year, and the U.S.'s dependency on foreign crude has become less stable as tensions in the Middle East have escalated. Barack Obama and John McCain have laid out their strategies to deal with the crisis, which has been exacerbated by the war in Iraq and the potential confrontation with Iran. Not to mention the oil speculator's dubious role. But sadly both major presidential candidates are echoing old solutions to our new 21st century environmental troubles. Mainly, where is our energy going to come from if oil supplies dwindle or prices skyrocket to even higher levels? And how will this all affect the dire reality of climate change?

McCain, for example, wants to drill off the coast of California, build dozens of nuclear reactors from Oregon to Florida, and slightly increase fuel efficiency of automobiles. Similarly, Sen. Barack Obama supports an array of neoliberal strategies to deal with the country's volatile energy situation. He is not opposed to the prospect of nuclear power, endorses capping-and-trading the coal industry's pollution output, and supports liquefied coal.

Well, that's a maybe on the latter.

"Senator Obama supports ... investing in technology that could make coal a clean-burning source of energy," Obama stated an email sent out by his campaign in June 2007. "However, unless and until this technology is perfected, Senator Obama will not support the development of any coal-to-liquid fuels unless they emit at least 20 percent less life-cycle carbon than conventional fuels."

You did not just read a lofty proclamation from a change agent, but a well-crafted rationale meant to appease concerned green voters. Meanwhile, back in the Senate, Obama's record relays a much different position on the subject.

It was only six months before the aforementioned email that Republican Senator Jim Bunning and Obama introduced the Coal-to-Liquid Fuel Promotion Act of 2007. The bill, introduced in January 2007, was referred to the Senate committee on finance and, if passed, would amend the Energy Policy Act of 2005 as well as the Energy Policy and Conservation Act to evaluate the feasibility of including coal-to-oil fuels in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve and provide incentives for research and plant construction.

Shortly after the introduction of the bill, Tommy Vietor, Obama's spokesman, defended the senator's proposal, "Illinois basin coal has more untapped energy potential than the oil reserves of Saudi Arabia and Kuwait combined. Senator Obama believes it is crucial that we invest in technologies to use these resources to reduce our dependence on foreign oil."

It was at the onset of the Nazi era that coal-to-liquid technology came to the forefront of modern energy science. In the latter part of the 1920s, German researchers Franz Fischer and Hans Tropsch developed the initial processes to liquify the dark rock into fuel. The procedure was utilized throughout World War II by both Germany and Japan. In fact, coal-to-liquid technology largely fueled Hitler's bloody campaigns, as Germany had little petroleum reserves but held vast amounts of coal deposits throughout the country. Not too unlike the United States' fossil fuel status today.

By 1930, Fischer and Tropsch had applied for several U.S. patents, yet it wasn't until earlier this summer that the first U.S. coal-to-liquid plant was set for constructing in West Virginia. But while liquid coal may help replace petroleum based fossil fuels, it is certainly not an answer to global warming.


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See more stories tagged with: global warming, election08, climate change, coal, mtr, clean coal, appalachia

Joshua Frank is the author of Left Out! How Liberals Helped Reelect George W. Bush and edits http://www.BrickBurner.org.

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i kNOW...
Posted by: droscify on Aug 5, 2008 2:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... you want to see a paragon of uncompromising strength as our democratic presidential candidate, but even if that were Obama, anything he proposed wouldn't be passed by all the spineless jerks in congress anyway. you criticize obama for a willingness to compromise with wackos on the right side of things but the fact is, thats the only way anythin concrete is going to get done. it sucks, but not everyone in our country is a democratic socialist. thats why you see obama take moderate positions. this isn't a surpirse. he's been running as a moderate from the beginning. that said, i think his heart is in the right place and we may actually see some good from an obama presidency

hell yeah

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Following the Germans first in space and now...
Posted by: nightgaunt on Aug 5, 2008 2:27 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Germans were the first to come up with the idea of space based weapons. Defensive till you see that they could also be offensive. Now coal to fuel for a global spanning war machine? Well all that is left is to adopt the goose step and and German accents to fit the bill of a world empire in the making! How nice! (sarcasm)

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Obama's energy policy is a complete abdication of responsibility
Posted by: PaulC on Aug 5, 2008 8:43 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is a disgrace!

- renewables get almost no mention except basically adopting the status quo
- right wing characterizations of the energy debate are his starting points: "transitioning to wind and solar", "clean coal", "safe nuclear"!
- a petty $150 billion over god knows how many years basically to fund clean coal R&D along with nuclear waste storage siting and building massively expensive nuclear plants that will not come online for decades!

It is more pandering to the establishment, another gross absence of the real kind of leadership that America and the world are desperately crying out for! Only silence and the groans of the earth, along with its shell-shocked life, answer back...

peace,
Paul

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Coal Gasification
Posted by: TejasDan on Aug 7, 2008 8:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From what I can tell the most promissing method of producing Clean Coal is Coal Gasification. Read the report on Coal gasification from the DOE or look it up yourself. In short the gasification process uses superheated plasma to reengineer the coal molecules and greatly reduce pollution levels in the process. Coal is cheap and we have plenty of it. In the USA we produce about half of our electricity from coal burning power plants. Retrofitting the existing sites to use Coal Gasification would greatly reduce pollution. I would like to see every coal burning powerplant in the world switch to Coal Gasification.
Carbon sequestering is already a viable and marketable enterprize that has been proven to increase yields in oilfields. So the folks saying the technology wont be viable for another 10 years need to have another look around.
In the future I would think we will be useing Coal Gasification Power Plants with combined cycle energy production capabilities will be used to desalinate sea water thus meeting another crisis head on.

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