I have heard leaders (including the President) asked the same question perhaps a dozen times in the last couple of weeks by "experts". It essentially goes like this:
"Considering the current economic meltdown, is now the best time to push green technologies?"
And the answer is always the same:
"It is imperative right now that we reduce our dependency on foreign oil"
The amazing thing to me is that this is NOT an answer to the question, and that the "expert" questioners seem to give all the politicos a pass with no followup or pressure.
If the GOAL is reduction of dependency on foreign oil, there are 2 ways to do this.
Method 1: Replace the foreign fuel with other energy sources. This is the method leaders typically align themselves with. It gives them all kinds of opportunity to talk about new job creation, evolving markets, green technologies, the environment, and of course, spend HUGE amounts of money.
Method 2: The second method of reducing dependency on foreign oil is to buy less. How come we don't talk about this? It's easy, it's virtually free. We can use more of our own oil reserves (which might require relaxing our own emissions standards), encourage reductions in consumption, or allow prices to increase some (which was quite effective in reducing consumption recently), or a combination of all of the above.
I'm thinking that the biggest immediate goal of the vast majority of the American people is to fix the current financial crisis, and the "foreign oil" argument is a bait and switch, where leaders pretend to be addressing the biggest current problem, while actually advancing their own political agendas.
I'm a big fan of developing green technologies, but I see it as a 20 year or more process. Does it REALLY have much value in discussions of the current short term economic crisis? Wouldn't it be wise to include it in small pieces as PART of an approach to the problem?
It looks like an excuse for politicians to spend money like they never have before, with minimal promise of real improvement. The jobs created will be fewer than those lost, the compensation will be less than those lost, green jobs are difficult to export, which could contribute to the trade imbalance, and there will be a HUGE shift in the demographics of the workplace (look at a map of the immigrant population of the US, and compare it to a map of the geographic areas that excel in solar and wind technologies).
It looks to me like it will lead to an enormous redistribution of wealth, a net loss in jobs, a net lowering of income and buying power, a weakening of the dollar, and a tremendous restructuring of the demographics of the political landscape in the US (maybe that's the real point).
I think green technologies should be pursued with a fervor, but not at the expense of US survival 5 or 10 years from now.
The "green technology" and "reduction of dependency on foreign oil" arguments were at the forefront 30 years ago, and President Carter didn't do too well with them. I honestly don't see much different in the current scenario, except the depth of how badly it is going to hurt our economy.
discuss...