By William Tucker on 9.5.06 @ 12:08AM
Arnold wants to reduce greenhouse gases -- if he's serious, he'll go nuclear. Here's why.
Last week California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger continued
his leftward lurch by mandating that California will reduce its
greenhouse gases 25 percent by the year 2020. In other words, the
state will adopt its own little Kyoto Protocols.
Conservatives are upset, as usual, arguing that any attempt to
impose draconic requirements will send the state's economy into a
tailspin. That may be true, but so what? California is only one
state and it won't hurt the country that much. Besides, if the
regulations really start causing havoc, somebody will call off the
effort or they'll create loopholes on top of loopholes that make
the program meaningless.
On the contrary, I think it's going to be fun to see what
happens. The reason is that environmentalists will quickly discover
they're never going to get anywhere in reducing carbon emissions
without embracing nuclear power.
First let me emphasize one point -- I believe global warming is
a serious problem that demands immediate action. I know this goes
against conservative doctrine but we've reached the point where
politics has to give way to science. The evidence that something
unprecedented is happening in the world's climate is becoming
overwhelming. The carbon dioxide content of the atmosphere has
grown steadily to 350 parts per million, far outside the range of
150-to-270 ppm where it has been over the last few thousands years.
(We have very good records from the Greenland and Antarctic ice
caps.) At the same time, the earth's temperature is rising
significantly. Eight of the ten hottest years on record have
occurred in the last decade.
Science is about prediction. Environmentalists have been talking
about global warming since 1988 -- well before any significant rise
in temperature began. Their argument is not tailored to fit the
facts. Events are unfolding pretty much as they predicted. Sure you
can argue that there are flaws in the model somewhere or that
perhaps some unrecognized solar cycle is behind increasing
temperatures. Or you can take the attitude of the Competitive
Enterprise Institute and say that global warming will be a great
experience. Who cares if Washington adopts the climate of Baghdad?
We can all run around in burnooses.
I would prefer to face facts, however, and admit that carbon
emissions are having a measurable impact on climate. It isn't all
that surprising. Coal -- the prime culprit -- is a 19th century
technology that we should have abandoned thirty years ago. Instead,
Jimmy Carter the nuclear engineer who was afraid of his shadow
decided that nuclear was too scary. (This all happened before Three
Mile Island.) In his energy speech of 1977, given three months
after taking office, Carter said we should double our coal
consumption and that's exactly what we've done. We burned 500
million tons of coal a year in 1977. Today we consume over a
billion. Every ton of carbon in coal produces three tons of carbon
dioxide. Is it so surprising that this should be having an impact
on the earth's atmosphere? Why are Republicans so wed to carrying
out Carter's mistaken policy?
Having said this, it must also be acknowledged that
environmentalists have their heads in the clouds when it comes to
discovering a solution to the problem. I just finished reading
Big Coal by Jeff Goodell, a reporter for Rolling
Stone and the New York Times Magazine. Goodell has
spent the last three years exploring all the sordid aspects of coal
-- the 100,000 miners who died in the 20th century, the
mountaintops now being decapitated in West Virginia, the mile-long
trains backed up trying to bring coal out of the Powder River
Basin, the dozens of coal plants around the country that were built
to 1974 standards and still spew sulfur dioxide, particulates,
mercury, nitrous oxides and all manner of air pollution, plus the
dozens of coal plants now on the drawing boards that will quickly
wipe out any gains from the Kyoto Protocols -- if those
improvements are ever made, which they probably won't be.
Yet what Goodell propose to do about replacing coal plants? In
his entire 250-page book there is only one sentence about nuclear
power. Here it is:
[W]hatever coal's environmental problems are, at least
coal plants are not going to melt down in some radioactive
nightmare or increase the risk that some Middle Eastern terrorist
will get his hands on a few ounces of uranium. [Page
100.]
Just for the record, you could probably go out in your backyard
this afternoon and dig up a few ounces of uranium. It is as common
as tin. Perhaps Goodell means plutonium, a manmade element produced
in reactors that can be used to make nuclear weapons. In either
case, our use of nuclear power has absolutely no bearing on what
happens in the Middle East. As Iran is proving, they can develop
their own technology.
And while we're on the subject, exactly what did happen during
the nuclear meltdown at Three Mile Island? Was anybody hurt? Did
the multiple layers of protection systems fail? More people are
killed by coal trains at railroad crossings every year than have
ever died from nuclear power.
Yet Goodell doesn't have to deal with this because as far as
environmentalists are concerned, nuclear power doesn't exist. Al
Gore pulled the same trick in An Inconvenient Truth when
he borrowed the work of Robert Socolow, head of the Carbon
Mitigation Initiative at Princeton. Socolow argues we need seven
"wedges" to stabilize atmospheric carbon. He proposes: fuel
switching, improved efficiency, energy conservation, alternate
energies, reforestation, carbon sequestration, and nuclear power.
He offers several other possibilities but nuclear is the only
technology that can provide two wedges. Yet when Socolow's
work is recited in Gore's movie, nuclear has disappeared.
It isn't as if environmentalists have to argue against nuclear
power. On the contrary, they pride themselves in their ignorance
about it. Nuclear simply isn't a subject for polite company.
All this will change, however, once California starts cutting
back on carbon. The Northeast Coalition -- New York, New Jersey,
and the New England states -- have already discovered this. When
they pledged to reduce greenhouse gases two years ago, there was
widespread talk about closing down Westchester County's Indian
Point, New Jersey's Oyster Creek, and just about every other
nuclear plant in sight. Now things have become strangely quiet.
Even some of the most dedicated environmentalists are starting
to realize they're never going to get anywhere in cutting carbon
emissions without nuclear. That's why it's going to be fun to see
what happens in California.
topics:
Environment, Global Warming, Law, Iran, Nuclear Weapons, Energy