Creigh Deeds is a very nice guy that I don't enjoy criticizing. He pushed several good clean energy bills in this year's Virginia Senate and has properly opposed drilling along Virginia's coast.
But in an interview last week with Lowell Feld of Blue Virginia, Deeds showed why progressives are turning away from his campaign and towards the clean energy policies of Brian Moran and (to a lesser extent) Terry McAuliffe.
At a time when President Obama, Congressional Democrats, and his two competitors are all pushing for a clean energy future, Deeds instead parroted the coal industry's favorite catch phrases and scare tactics. To listen to Deeds, the only reason coal remains the dirtiest source of energy on the planet is that we haven't already dumped enough billions of research dollars into it. Like a bailout that never ends, we need to keep those billions flowing:
Deeds sounds like he's selling coal air freshener. We need to harness the awesome power of the word "clean"!
Look, coal is still dirty because no one has figured out a cost-effective way to capture and store its carbon dioxide emissions. Even if that technology does come along, it will add an estimated 25 percent to the cost of producing coal-fired power (which has already gone up 20 percent in Virginia just since September). And that doesn't get into coal's other emissions that include mercury, carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and particulates.
We don't need another four years of a governor telling us we can't get off coal and all we can do is sit on our hands, wishin' and hopin' for the day carbon capture and storage comes along. We need to begin to transition off dirty coal & oil and onto clean energy, and we need to start right now.
Deeds also fumbled Lowell's question on mountaintop removal, bizarrely beginning his answer by saying "the coal industry calls it surface mining." Huh? Bernie Madoff didn't call his investment firm Ponzi Scheme Inc., but that's what it was. Again, it's hard to imagine a coal industry spokesman answering the question much differently.
I like Creigh Deeds. He's still be better on the environment than presumptive Republican nominee Bob McDonnell. But at a time when we desperately need real change on energy policy to save consumers money and protect Virginia's natural resources, Deeds sounds far too much like more of the same.
2 comments:
Life is about perspective. What you see depends on where you are standing. You are standing in Arlington and your constituents don't rely on coal for the jobs that pay their bills. Creigh Deeds is from SW VA where the coal mining industry feeds a lot of families. While it would be nice to wave a magic wand and do what is best for the environment, there is a cost for everything. Don't start eliminating entire industries unless you have a plan to bring another industry and other jobs into those regions. Creigh comes from there and understands it like "outsiders" cannot. We may all be Virginians, but Virginia is a big state and we are not all standing in the same place with the same view.
Catherine - Let me assure you that if the coal companies could mine and ship coal without employing a single person, they would do it. They do NOT have the interests of employees in mind. Besides, dollar for dollar, traditional energy generation creates much fewer jobs than virtually any other industry. And, although some coal is mined in VA, most of the dollars Virginians spend on coal ends up going out of state. If we invested the $2 billion that is being spent on the Wise plant on efficiency, we could eliminate its need and create way more jobs, too.
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