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Friday 18 July 2008
by: David Stout, The New York Times
Washington - Former Vice President Al Gore said on Thursday that Americans
must abandon fossil fuels within a decade and rely on the sun, the winds and
other environmentally friendly sources of electric power, or risk losing their
national security as well as their creature comforts.
"The survival of the United States of America as we know it is at risk,"
Mr. Gore said in a speech to an energy conference here. "The future of
human civilization is at stake."
Mr. Gore called for the kind of concerted national effort that enabled Americans
to walk on the moon 39 years ago this month, just eight years after President
John F. Kennedy famously embraced that goal. He said the goal of producing all
of the nation's electricity from "renewable energy and truly clean, carbon-free
sources" within 10 years is not some farfetched vision, although he said
it would require fundamental changes in political thinking and personal expectations.
"This goal is achievable, affordable and transformative," Mr. Gore
said in remarks prepared for the conference. "It represents a challenge
to all Americans, in every walk of life - to our political leaders, entrepreneurs,
innovators, engineers, and to every citizen."
Although Mr. Gore has made global warming and energy conservation his signature
issues, winning a Nobel Prize for his efforts, his speech on Thursday argued
that the reasons for renouncing fossil fuels go far beyond concern for the climate.
In it, he cited military-intelligence studies warning of "dangerous national
security implications" tied to climate change, including the possibility
of "hundreds of millions of climate refugees" causing instability
around the world, and said the United States is dangerously vulnerable because
of its reliance on foreign oil.
Doubtless aware that his remarks would be met with skepticism, or even ridicule,
in some quarters, Mr. Gore insisted in his speech that the goal of carbon-free
power is not only achievable but practical, and that businesses would embrace
it once they saw that it made fundamental economic sense.
Mr. Gore said the most important policy change in the transformation would
be taxes on carbon dioxide production, with an accompanying reduction in payroll
taxes. "We should tax what we burn, not what we earn," his prepared
remarks said.
The former vice president said in his speech that he could not recall a worse
confluence of problems facing the country: higher gasoline prices, jobs being
"outsourced," the home mortgage industry in turmoil. "Meanwhile,
the war in Iraq continues, and now the war in Afghanistan appears to be getting
worse," he said.
By calling for new political leadership and speaking disdainfully of "defenders
of the status quo," Mr. Gore was hurling a dart at the man who defeated
him for the presidency in 2000, George W. Bush. Critics of Mr. Bush say that
his policies are too often colored by his background in the oil business.
A crucial shortcoming in the country's political leadership is a failure to
view interlocking problems as basically one problem that is "deeply ironic
in its simplicity," Mr. Gore said, namely "our dangerous over-reliance
on carbon-based fuels."
"We're borrowing money from China to buy oil from the Persian Gulf to
burn it in ways that destroy the planet," Mr. Gore said. "Every bit
of that's got to change."
And it can change, he said, citing some scientists' estimates that enough solar
energy falls on the surface of the earth in 40 minutes to meet the world's energy
needs for a year, and that the winds that blow across the Midwest every day
could meet the country's daily electricity needs.
Senator Barack Obama of Illinois, the presumptive Democratic candidate for
president, immediately praised Mr. Gore's speech. "For decades, Al Gore
has challenged the skeptics in Washington on climate change and awakened the
conscience of a nation to the urgency of this threat," Mr. Obama said.
A shift away from fossil fuels would make the United States a leader instead
of a sometime rebel on energy and conservation issues worldwide, Mr. Gore said.
Nor, he said, would the hard work of people who toil on oil rigs and deep in
the earth be for naught. "We should guarantee good jobs in the fresh air
and sunshine for any coal miner displaced by impacts on the coal industry,"
he said by way of example. "Every single one of them."
"Of course, there are those who will tell us that this can't be done,"
he conceded. "But even those who reap the profits of the carbon age have
to recognize the inevitability of its demise. As one OPEC oil minister observed,
'The Stone Age didn't end because of a shortage of stones.'"
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