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- Climate Action and Senate Politics Don't Mix
- Clean Energy Outlook: Significant Question Marks Dot the Landscape
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- Summer's Over, Now Let's Get Back to Work
- Utilities: Scaling the Clean-Tech Mountain
- Washington Acts While Wall Street Waits
- Winds of Change Blowing Through the Heartland and Beyond
- Changing Climate: Carbon Tax Gaining Momentum over Cap-and-Trade?
- Brave New Worlds: The Expanding Reach of Clean Tech
- Getting Serious About Clean-Energy Stimulus
- Obama-Era Carbon Policy Must Transform Old Divisions
- The Best of Times / Worst of Times Balance Sheet
- Muito Obrigado, Brasil
- Turning the Page: Financing our Clean-Energy Future
- Perilous Times Call for Transformational Thinking, and Action
- Inflate This: Conservation and Efficiency Are Key to Our Energy Future
- From the Heartland, a Microcosm of Energy Transition
Perilous Times Call for Transformational Thinking, and Action
Clint Wilder
For three late September days in a traffic-clogged New York City,
the famous and the powerful gather at the Clinton Global Initiative
annual conference to share charismatic thoughts and large-scale
commitments to address issues in global health care, education,
poverty alleviation, and energy and climate change. Attending the
conference this year as a facilitator in the energy/climate change
track, I heard inspiring words throughout each day from the likes of
Bill Gates, William McDonough, Lester Brown, Tony Blair, T. Boone
Pickens, Michael Bloomberg, Bono, Wesley Clark, Van Jones, and no
less than three of the past four Nobel Peace Prize winners: Al Gore,
Muhammad Yunus, and Wangari Maathai.
But it was a line from Rocky Mountain Institute founder and energy
efficiency guru Amory Lovins that, to me, best reflected the spirit
of this conference – and conveyed a key message for anyone involved
in meeting the world's energy challenges in these most troubled and
perilous of times. Describing Ford Motor's 2006 hiring of CEO Alan
Mulally, who had spearheaded Boeing's decision to focus on energy-
efficient aircraft with the Dreamliner and other projects, Lovins
said Mulally had come to Ford with "transformational intent."
The Clinton conference, of course, took place against the backdrop
of Wall Street's financial crisis playing out just a few miles
downtown. We are in a time of staggering superlatives – a $700
billion bailout package, a 777-point stock market drop, and a 19-
square mile ice sheet (the size of Manhattan) breaking loose in
northern Canada one month ago. In every facet of life – population,
health, education, energy, environment, and now, financial markets,
we face big, big challenges. But size alone will not create the
solutions. We need transformational intent.
The intent of Muhammad Yunus, the microcredit pioneer and founder of
Bangladesh's Grameen Bank, was changing the thinking around how to
assist those at the base of the economic pyramid in one of the
world's most impoverished countries. "We have to get out of the
mentality that the rich people will do the business, and the poor
people will get the charity," he said. "Don't call me a
philanthropist. I'm a businessman." For more than 30 years, Grameen
has extended micro-loans to more than 7 million people, more than 95
percent of them women. It has helped transform rural economies not
only in Bangladesh, but through microfinance institutions supported
by the Grameen Foundation in 25 other countries, including the
United States.
When it comes to energy, as Albert Einstein said, the serious
problems we face today won't be solved by the same minds that
created them. Offshore drilling won't solve our energy challenges,
nor will Senator John McCain's proposed 45 new U.S. nuclear plants
by 2030. "More of the same, only bigger" will not get it done. If
we're going to address climate change in any meaningful way, shift
the geopolitical dynamics of imported oil, and rebuild our
beleaguered economy based on clean energy, we need dramatically new
ways of doing things.
The good news is that transformational intent is present and moving
forward in thousands of clean energy, transportation, and green
building initiatives around the world. In Israel and Denmark, where
Silicon Valley entrepreneur Shai Agassi's Better Place aims to
create nationwide all-electric car networks in both countries, with
more to follow. In China, where the Joint U.S.-China Cooperation on
Clean Energy (JUCCCE) non-profit is working with Duke Energy and
GridPoint to deploy smart-grid technologies on a large scale. In Abu
Dhabi, where the Masdar Initiative is constructing the world's first
100 percent renewable energy-powered city of 60,000 people. And in
Denmark again, where Social Democratic Party leader Helle Thorning-
Schmidt says her nation intends to be the world's first carbon-
neutral country (it's already 30 percent clean-powered today).
Here in the U.S., Denver billionaire Phil Anschutz is investing $3
billion in a 900-mile transmission line to bring wind power from
southern Wyoming to the populations of Las Vegas, Phoenix, and
southern California. In the Pacific Northwest, Clean Edge and
Climate Solutions are releasing a study, Carbon-Free Prosperity
2025, that maps out a transformative vision for the clean-tech
future of Oregon and Washington. Google is investing in
concentrating solar power, geothermal, and other technologies to
fulfill its tranformative mission: make clean energy cheaper than
coal. In Newark, New Jersey, 39-year-old mayor Cory Booker is
working with Apollo Alliance and others to make his working-class
city a model of green-collar jobs, cleaner transportation, and green
buildings. And T. Boone Pickens, dubbed "the John Madden of new
energy" by Tom Brokaw at the Clinton conference because of his
current media ubiquity, is proposing massive changes in the way we
generate electricity and power vehicles.
I don't agree with all of the Pickens Plan, but its dramatic scale
and ambitious targets for wind energy are great examples of what I'm
talking about. I'm glad he's out there, with Sierra Club executive
director Carl Pope, advocating a dramatic new energy direction. Like
the people driving the examples cited above and so many more,
Pickens has transformational intent. We need it today in our
financial system, and we damn sure need it today – and tomorrow --
if we're going to have any hope of building a sustainable energy
future.
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Wilder is Clean Edge's contributing editor, co-author of The Clean
Tech Revolution, and a blogger about clean-tech issues for
The Huffington Post. E-mail him at wilder@cleanedge.com.