User:
luke
Date: 7/3/2008 9:02 am
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While the debate about our energy future rages among the
Presidential candidates, a similar debate is quietly taking place here in Texas. Last week, the
Governor’s Competitiveness Council released a draft Texas Energy Plan to guide Texas’ energy decisions
in coming years.
With the rush to build new coal plants in recent years without
proper consideration of impacts to local communities and the environment, it is
very clear that Texas
needs a plan to guide our energy future and to make sure our energy decisions
properly consider the law, the impacts on public health, our environment, and
water usage and public preferences.
Irresponsibly, the draft energy plan does not at all
consider what new coal or nuclear plants will mean for compliance with federal
air quality standards, for our water supplies or for our safety. And rather
than develop a plan to reduce carbon emissions as scientists tell us we must do
to avoid dangerous climate change, the Council proposes using taxpayer money to subsidize a lobbying campaign by Exxon and other
polluters against global warming legislation. All in all, the
recommendations are very much skewed in favor of maintaining our dependence on
dirty fossil fuels and nuclear power.
Texas is one of the most
technologically and economically advanced states in the nation, blessed with
vast natural and intellectual resources. We have a track record of responding
to major challenges and achieving unthinkable goals. If any state in the union
is capable of creating an energy system that can fuel our economy while
preserving our environment and our long-term security, it should be us.
But our
energy situation today is less secure than it has been in recent memory. Our
domestic production of oil peaked decades ago and our production of natural gas
may be peaking now. As a result, we import more of our energy than ever before,
leaving our energy supplies and national security vulnerable to political
instability abroad. We have ample supplies of coal, but mining it causes severe
environmental damage and burning it releases large amounts of global warming
pollution. Nuclear power has been tried and found wanting for economic,
environmental and public safety reasons. And virtually every year, Texans consume
more energy in our cars, homes and businesses.
For Texas to retain our
economic vigor, security and environmental health, we must build toward a New
Energy Future – one based on homegrown, environmentally friendly energy sources
and the sensible use of energy throughout the economy. We have the tools to
achieve a better energy future – in the technological prowess of academia and
industry, the cutting-edge public policies that were pioneered in Texas, and in our vast
reserves of energy from the sun, wind and crops.
Despite the serious flaws of the draft Texas Energy Plan, it
does include some important policies that would help support clean
alternatives, including support for expanded energy efficiency programs and
transmission investments to bring clean wind power to our cities.
It also includes some incentives for solar power, for which Texas has tremendous
potential. According to the State Energy Office, the sunshine falling on just
one acre of land in west Texas
is the energy equivalent of 800 barrels of oil a year. If we put solar panels
on an area thirty miles by thirty miles in west Texas, we could generate enough electricity
for the entire state.
Unfortunately,
as the rest of the global solar industry is growing at an astounding rate, Texas is starting to
fall behind. Other states like California and New Jersey and the nations of Germany,
Spain and Japan are far ahead in creating
solar programs, attracting a growing number of investments, jobs and
manufacturing plants. The Energy Plan’s proposals to eliminate the sales tax on
solar equipment and installation and allow consumers to get a fair price for
extra solar they produce are a good first step, but by themselves are probably
not big enough to really get things rolling.
In
April, Governor Perry announced a $1 million state grant to support
construction of a solar manufacturing facility in Austin. I hope he will continue this kind of
strategic investment and lay out an ambitious solar agenda.
Texas should follow the lead of the cities of Austin, San Antonio and Bryan by offering rebates
to help consumers install solar. We should also create a solar program, modeled
on the successful renewable portfolio standard first established by the
Legislature in 1999, which sets enforceable goals for utilities to generate
solar power.
Texas has the potential
to be a world solar leader. A small investment now could bring billions of
dollars in investment to the state over the next decade and help bring clear,
blue skies back to Texas.