What's green and fuzzy and can kill you if it falls out of a tree?A pool table.
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I think this quote from that article is Hilaryous."Take a serious look at nuclear."
Nuclear is now very much in the news as a potential power source because of its lack of contribution to global warming. If you look at nuclear energy, which currently provides 20 percent of our energy with virtually no emission of greenhouse gases, we do have to take a serious look, but there remain very serious questions about nuclear power and our ability to manage it in a world with suicidal terrorists.So I have real concerns, specifically about a plant in my state near where I live, Indian Point, which has had a number of problems, and more generally with the capacity and quality of the oversight provided by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Hilary Clinton's Energy Policy Clinton's energy policy context Our supplies are vulnerable to terrorists. High prices are a burden on business, families and especially poor families. Earth is warming faster than at any time in 200,000 years. Opportunity for cleaner environment and technologically driven job growth. Save US economy tens of billions of dollars.Clinton's Goals: Reduce our dependence on foreign oil by at least 50 percent by 2025. Convert 4 million barrels a day of oil to biomass by 2025. Efficiency (cars, trucks, industrial, residential) can reduce usage by 4 M bbl/day. Ethanol pumps at 50% of gas stations nationwide by 2015 and 100 percent by 2025.Clinton's Specific Proposals: Strategic Energy Fund (SEF), like DARPA, funded in part from windfall gains to oil. Extending for 10 years the production tax credit. [Ethanol?] Doubling consumer tax breaks for hybrids, clean diesel and other advanced vehicles. A new tax incentive for fleet owners to purchase more efficient vehicles. Loan guarantees for the first 1 B gal. of cellulosic ethanol production capacity. $1 billion from SEF into cellulosic ethanol research. A 50% tax credit to gas station owners for the cost of installing ethanol pumps. Increase energy-efficiency tax incentives for homeowners and businesses. By 2010, require the federal gov. to purchase the most efficient cars made. By 2013, require 10% of federal electricity purchases come from renewables. Require 20% of electricity produced from wind, solar and other renewables by 2020. Require the big oil companies to install ethanol pumps at all the stations they own. A mandatory cap-and-trade system, like in the McCain-Lieberman legislation. Undertake 5 large-scale tests of geologic CO2 sequestration. Provide tax credits for carbon sequestration to encourage domestic oil production. Take a serious look at nuclear. Look for places where mass transit makes sense and make the investment. Provide a tax incentive to trade in inefficient old cars for more efficient cars. Make progress on fuel-efficiency standards. Offer auto companies assistance with retiree health care costs in exchange for them investing more in fuel-efficient cars. Increase Strategic Petroleum Reserve to hold 90 days of supply and use mandates and incentives to ensure distributors hold similar stocks. Update the process of releasing oil to make it responsive to short-term market swings.
It appears to me that people who live near the coasts will have to move inland.I think using more nuclear power, solar power and wind power instead of fossil fuels will mitigate the climate change that is coming, but it will not reverse it completely.
Oh, that's nice. What does america think? Until the american government recognizes it, no matter how much ass the rest of the world kicks at mending the damage, america is gonna spoil their efforts.
Quote from: Nomaken on February 04, 2007, 01:19:12 PMBut does the next administration consider it an important part of their running ticket? If Hilary Clinton wins the election it will be. She was speaking about global warming recently.http://zfacts.com/p/660.html
But does the next administration consider it an important part of their running ticket?
Sorry, it's from the link you posted. I was just being lazy ...The thing that I think it is so funny is its lack of specificity. How could anyone disagree with her stance.Quote from: zfacts.com Hilary Clinton's Energy Policy Clinton's energy policy context Our supplies are vulnerable to terrorists. High prices are a burden on business, families and especially poor families. Earth is warming faster than at any time in 200,000 years. Opportunity for cleaner environment and technologically driven job growth. Save US economy tens of billions of dollars.Clinton's Goals: Reduce our dependence on foreign oil by at least 50 percent by 2025. Convert 4 million barrels a day of oil to biomass by 2025. Efficiency (cars, trucks, industrial, residential) can reduce usage by 4 M bbl/day. Ethanol pumps at 50% of gas stations nationwide by 2015 and 100 percent by 2025.Clinton's Specific Proposals: Strategic Energy Fund (SEF), like DARPA, funded in part from windfall gains to oil. Extending for 10 years the production tax credit. [Ethanol?] Doubling consumer tax breaks for hybrids, clean diesel and other advanced vehicles. A new tax incentive for fleet owners to purchase more efficient vehicles. Loan guarantees for the first 1 B gal. of cellulosic ethanol production capacity. $1 billion from SEF into cellulosic ethanol research. A 50% tax credit to gas station owners for the cost of installing ethanol pumps. Increase energy-efficiency tax incentives for homeowners and businesses. By 2010, require the federal gov. to purchase the most efficient cars made. By 2013, require 10% of federal electricity purchases come from renewables. Require 20% of electricity produced from wind, solar and other renewables by 2020. Require the big oil companies to install ethanol pumps at all the stations they own. A mandatory cap-and-trade system, like in the McCain-Lieberman legislation. Undertake 5 large-scale tests of geologic CO2 sequestration. Provide tax credits for carbon sequestration to encourage domestic oil production. Take a serious look at nuclear. Look for places where mass transit makes sense and make the investment. Provide a tax incentive to trade in inefficient old cars for more efficient cars. Make progress on fuel-efficiency standards. Offer auto companies assistance with retiree health care costs in exchange for them investing more in fuel-efficient cars. Increase Strategic Petroleum Reserve to hold 90 days of supply and use mandates and incentives to ensure distributors hold similar stocks. Update the process of releasing oil to make it responsive to short-term market swings.