By Solar Nation
January 4, 2008On the energy and environmental front, anyone following the presidential primaries today can make some fairly safe predictions about our sustainable future without even picking a winner from the thirteen major candidates. In its 2008 Voters’ Guide, the League of Conservation Voters has compared and tabulated the energy policies of all the presidential hopefuls (see tables below). The League doesn’t over-editorialize, but it’s clear from even an unbiased reading of their positions that the country will go in a diametrically different direction in 2009 depending largely on the party of the 44th president.
To compare the competing Democrats, one would think they were vying to establish which of them is the greenest one of all. And while this could be construed as one-upmanship at this point in the race, it’s also a good indication of how seriously each of them takes ‘green’ issues. They have all published detailed, thoughtful plans on how they would deal with the issues of energy independence and climate change, and what’s most encouraging about them is the extent to which they see the twin issues as interdependent. Here’s a simplified summary of their positions:
| Issues | Clinton | Edwards | Kucinich | Obama |
| Mandatory cap & auction of pollution permits | Supports, with 100% auction | Supports, with 100% auction | Supports cap | Supports, with 100% auction |
| Carbon emission reduction |
Supports 80% reduction by 2050 | Supports ≥80% reduction by 2050 |
Supports 80% reduction by 2050 |
Supports 80% reduction by 2050 |
| Fleetwide fuel efficiency | 40 mpg by 2020, 55 mpg by 2030 |
40 mpg by 2016 | 40-45 mpg by 2017 | 52 mpg by 2026 |
| National renewable electricity standard |
25% by 2025 | 25% by 2025 | 30-40% by 2020 | 25% by 2025 |
| Energy efficiency improvements |
20% by 2020 | 15% by 2018 | 10% by 2020 | 50% by 2030 |
| Emissions from coal plants | Supports phased-in carbon capture in new plants |
Opposes new plants without carbon capture |
Supports phaseout of all coal power & mining | Would consider banning new plants |
| Liquid coal development | Supportive if carbon pollution reduced by 20% |
Opposed | Opposed | Supportive if carbon pollution reduced by 20% |
For the most part, Republicans also talk up a storm on energy independence, but somehow miss the connection to climate change mitigation. This leads them to interpret our energy future mostly in terms of new nuclear power plants, old coal, clean coal, liquid coal and business-as-usual in Detroit and the oil states. Examining their positions on the same seven issues listed above, we see a wider spectrum of responses, ranging from mildly supportive to insouciant to frighteningly hostile:
| Issues | Giuliani | Huckabee | McCain | Paul | Romney | Thompson |
| Mandatory cap and auction of pollution permits | Opposed | Supports, with no position on auction | Supports, with no position on auction | No stated position | Supports cap if enacted globally | No stated position |
| Carbon emission reduction | No stated position | No target specified | Supports 65% reduction by 2050 | No stated position | No stated position | No stated position |
| Fleetwide fuel efficiency | Opposes mandatory action | 35 mpg by 2020 | General support, no targets | Opposed 33 mpg in 2005 | Opposes as stand-alone measure | Opposed 35 mpg in 2002 |
| National renewable electricity standard | Opposed | Supports 15% by 2020 (inc. nuclear & clean coal) | Supports state & local, not national, standards | No stated position | No stated position | Opposed 10% & 20% standard in 2002 |
| Energy efficiency improvements | General support, no targets | General support, no targets | General support, no targets | No stated position | General support, no targets | General support, no targets |
| Emissions from coal plants | Supports conventional coal | Supports conventional coal | Supports carbon capture in new plants | Supports conventional coal | Supports conventional coal | Supports conventional coal |
| Liquid coal development | Supports liquid coal | No stated position | Will support liquid coal if pollution capture/control improves | No stated position | Supports liquid coal | Supports liquid coal |
As can be seen, Governor Huckabee and Senator McCain lift themselves somewhat above their competitors with support for fuel efficiency and carbon emission limits, but with these exceptions noted, the Republican candidates seem to be sharing a generally reactionary platform. Candidate Ron Paul’s position on energy is perhaps scarier than most, as he does not appear to have given much thought to the seven major issues measured; on fuel efficiency and coal plants he has shown himself no friend to clean energy or the environment, while on the other five issues he hasn’t recorded any position whatsoever.
Giuliani’s and Thompson’s records show opposition to virtually everything beneficial to the environment, and support for continued use of coal in any form. And the campaign promise of the former governor of Massachusetts, Mitt Romney, to bring large-scale clean energy technology to market, clashes with his public opposition to the nation’s largest proposed offshore wind project off the coast of the Bay State.
Overall, the impression given by the campaign literature of GOP hopefuls is that the energy/environmental debate has not been worthy of serious thought, nor has it featured in their spoken rhetoric as much as immigration, healthcare or the Iraq war. Compared with some of the Democratic candidates’ meticulously crafted plans with their targets, pricetags and deadlines, the Republican contenders seem to be paying lip service to an issue they know does not excite the general public. And so far as government support for clean energies such as solar is concerned, most of them mention it only as afterthoughts to ideas for increased use of coal, drilling in the ANWR and building more nuclear plants, measures that may offset some fossil fuel imports but will exacerbate environmental problems already approaching crisis levels.
So in this exercise in crystal ball gazing, you could probably get just as accurate a result with a two-dollar snowglobe. With Huckabee and McCain, and to a greater extent with the six Democrats, there is a sense of recognition of the comparative importance of the energy issue. It’s the recognition that whereas we can survive not finding a perfect solution to some of the more emotionally charged issues in politics today, we can’t survive a failure to address effectively—and on a national scale—the interrelated issues of energy and environment.
It’s also difficult to escape the conclusion that, in the event of a candidate in the mold of Giuliani, Paul, Romney or Thompson being sworn in next January, the brotherly relationship between the oil & gas industry and Government that characterized the Bush Administration will become, if anything, measurably cozier.
One Response to “How Green Was My Candidate?”
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January 26th, 2008 at 8:34 am
Ron Paul’s stance on energy can be found at:
http://www.ronpaul2008.com/issues/energy