Wednesday, May 19, 2010

No Nuke Left Behind?

The Kerry-Lieberman "American Power Act" was just rolled out amid much fanfare. It attempts to address climate change and create a national energy policy out of the vacuum of the Bush years. While the bill is a start, it is not a strong start.

The bill would enact a complicated version of a cap-and-trade system, which has plusses and minuses. Simplicity is not one of them, and Kerry-Lieberman appears to take this to an extreme, separating out different sectors (e.g. industrial, electric generation, transportation) for different treatment.

It would also boost federal (read: taxpayer) subsidies for nuclear power, which is already getting huge subsidies. You could buy an awful lot of solar panels for the money that we are giving to the nuclear industry now, and this bill would just give them even more.

The allocation of allowances is also problematic. It appears that a large number of allowances will be given away (to the electric generation section) for free, and the bulk of those would be given to the most polluting generators, who would be getting subsidized by (the ratepayers of) the cleanest generators. So California would be paying for the midwest coal states to clean up their act.

In the Washington tradition of providing something for everyone, but especially those who might oppose the bill, there are incentives aplenty for coal states, such as taxpayer funding for carbon capture and sequestration, even though a real carbon price should create a market incentive for the private sector to finance this.

There is a complex smorgasbord of offshore oil drilling provisions, designed to provide something for both pro-drilling and anti-drilling states, while also bribing states with lease revenues to encourage them to be pro-drilling.

Other aspects weaken the bill further. The timelines are slow, with the industrial sector not being covered at all until 2016. The bill appears to allow for huge amounts of potentially questionable "offsets," where you can offset your emissions by doing something like planting trees or capturing cow farts.

This is just a quick preliminary take, as the bill will come into clearer focus as folks start to wade through its roughly 1000 pages. It will also undoubtedly change as the various interests line up to reshape it in their favor.

Like a toddler's first step, the existence of the bill is significant, but it does not take us very far.


Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Waffling Toward Totalitarianism

Eric Holder, speaking for the Obama administration (which is going seriously wobbly in the face of Republican accusations of being soft on terrorism), announced that the administration will consider modifications to the Miranda rule for terrorist suspects:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/05/09/AR2010050902062.html

Joseph Lieberman would go farther, and strip Americans of their citizenship if they were tied to terrorism: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/05/nyregion/05arrest.html

One big problem: who is a "terrorist?"

Is it an art professor in Buffalo, making art with bacteria?
http://rochester.indymedia.org/newswire/display/21161/index.php
http://www.thenation.com/article/terror-hysteria-gone-absurdist

Or is it a Jewish college student, planning to protest the Republican National Convention?
http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2008/10/14-0

How about a graduate student in Idaho running a website for a Muslim charity?
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2002097570_sami22m.html

While these may not be the type of people who the change is aimed at, they have all faced terrorism-related criminal charges, and would be subject to the same law.

Anyone who has watched American television, with its plentiful cop shows, probably knows the Miranda warning better than the Pledge of Allegiance, so it seems unlikely that this new erosion of rights would actually accomplish anything, especially since there is already a public safety exception to Miranda. It is scary, however, how willing the Obama administration is to give away (or perhaps take away) even more rights just to appease right-wing attack dogs. But that is what happens when polling comes before principles.

Glenn Beck, of all people, in discussing the suspect in the botched Times Square bombing, actually showed a better grasp of Constitutional law than Holder (Columbia Law School) or Lieberman (Yale Law School): “He has all the rights under the Constitution. We don’t shred the Constitution when it’s popular.”


Sunday, May 2, 2010

If Oil Drilling Can Do This, What Could a Nuclear Plant Do?

Given the ongoing disaster of the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, how much should we trust claims that nuclear power is totally safe? Maybe less than we thought.

The problem is that the potential scope and scale of a nuclear disaster, such as Chernobyl, is so huge that our minds don't really believe it. Our nuclear reactors in California have been operating for decades, and they have not melted down or blown up or spawned multi-headed livestock. Check out this article explaining why most California homeowners do not have earthquake insurance, despite the likelihood of a large quake: http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/Insurance/InsureYourHome/why-you-may-be-in-disaster-denial.aspx

But the owners and operators of nuclear power plants, who would normally be on the hook if a reactor melted down, have insurance. And they have a federal law that limits their liability, and that provides for federal indemnification (read: taxpayer bailout) if the liability goes above that limit. It is called the Price-Anderson Act. http://www.eoearth.org/article/Price-Anderson_Act_of_1957,_United_States

Even that bastion of environmental protection, the Cato Institute, complains about how this is just one of the massive subsidies given to nuclear power: http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=3134

Oh, and the nuclear power industry gets government (taxpayer) loan guarantees, too: http://www.ucsusa.org/assets/documents/nuclear_power/nuclear-loan-guarantees.pdf

So we are subsidizing the nuclear power industry in a number of ways, including paying for part of their insurance, or more precisely, making it so that their insurers do not have to cover the full cost of a nuclear disaster - because we do.

If nuclear power was really so safe, would it need this protection against liability? If nuclear power was really so safe, would it need us to subsidize its insurance costs? If nuclear power was really so safe, why would it be asking us to pick up the tab if there is a disaster? There isn't really going to be a disaster, is there?

Environmental Disaster Continues to Grow

The destroyed oil drilling rig is continuing to spill oil, but not just 42,000 gallons a day - more like 200,000 gallons a day: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_gulf_oil_spill

In addition to 11 lost lives, this is turning into an environmental catastrophe, and appears likely to be an economic disaster as well, with its potential effect upon fisheries and other resources.

This spill has shown the vacuousness of the claims that "drill, baby, drill" is an energy policy. Let us hope that BP can and will use all of its resources to stop the leak soon.