A Solution For Barack

on Wednesday 21 August 2013
A Solution For Barack
Pardon me for being so informal, but, we're both from Hawaii, and this title follows my very first HuffPo on May 29, Well, Barack, We Have A Problem... which boiled down those two SIMPLE SOLUTIONS books I recently wrote (see "About Me" on the right) into a whimsical musing about how Barack Obama could fund his plan to combat Peak Oil and Global Warming, and in so doing, end wars forever. Since that article, he went on to prevail over Hillary Clinton and John McCain, and is now the President-Elect, while I proceeded to post 32 more pieces for the Huffington Post, all on energy and the environment, and wondering why I was doing this.

I woke up at 3AM this morning and realized why. All the above crystallize the essence of what should be our national energy policy, and I might well have a solution for our President-Elect. Don't blame President Bush, or the Congress, or the oil companies for our energy problem. We are at fault. You, me, us. This posting drew more than 100 comments, arriving to the conclusion that we have no energy policy because it is not important enough.

Oil is now below 50/barrel. Gasoline prices are approaching historic lows (in 2008 dollars). As sincere as P-E Obama was about green jobs and a change, complacency looms to prevail. HuffPo #32 suggests that our current economic collapse actually is A Gift to Planet Earth and Humanity. After the Energy Crises of 1974 and 1979, there was a flurry of activity, followed by a general abandonment of anything sustainable, as we went back to our petroleum addiction. We now have the worry about the Greenhouse Effect, plus, that 147/bbl spike in mid July, so, hopefully, we can be smarter this time.

But the Obama energy transition team has a daunting task of delivering a meaningful plan against the tide of low oil prices and competing priorities. And what a doozy, for one of my other HuffPos on Billions and Trillions reports: if you combine the total cost of the Manhattan, Marshall and Apollo programs, and bring it up to 2008 dollars, you need nearly 200 times more money than what those three monumental efforts cost our nation, just to meet the challenge of the Greenhouse Effect.

But you've got to start somewhere, so while the Obama energy transition team won't have trillions of dollars to spend, they can make a crucial difference. There will be a million ideas and thousands of lobbyists clamoring for attention. More than anything else, the team needs to clarify and focus with vision. I offer the following simple solutions:

1. "RENEWABLE ELECTRICITY IS ALMOST A GIVEN, BUT MAINTAIN THOSE TAX INCENTIVES AND EXPAND RESEARCH ON MANY OF THE SOLAR AND OCEAN OPTIONS. ADD A PENNY PER POUND CARBON DIOXIDE TAX, PROPORTIONATELY LINKED TO 30/BARREL OIL, TO ADJUST AS OIL PRICES VACILLATE, SO THAT AT 150/BARREL, THE TAX SHOULD BE 5 CENTS".

2. Ground transportation is a real problem. "A DOLLAR PER GALLON INVESTMENT SURCHARGE ON GASOLINE CAN BE JUSTIFIED". We'd still be paying much less than in Europe and Japan. Ethanol from food, of course, should be terminated as fast as the Farm Lobby allows, if not sooner. The fermentation of cellulose to ethanol should be compared against gasification/catalysis into methanol. Unfortunately, a fair assessment might not be possible because the Department of Energy does not support any biomethanol research. Unfortunately, too, my HuffPo #33 and subsequent comments from this readership suggest that while the current darling, plug-in electric cars, are the obvious bridge for the next decade, they might be a dead end. However, the fuel cell option will need hydrogen, which is very expensive to produce, handle and store, or the direct methanol fuel cell, which might have a fatal flaw. What then? Good luck! "BUT AT LEAST TAKE A CLOSE LOOK AT THE METHANOL ECONOMY".

3. Aviation? This has not even been considered, but should. When I drafted the first hydrogen bill for Senator Spark Matsunaga nearly three decades ago, I added a clause for the National Aerospace Plane, thanks to input from Lockheed. To shorten a long tale of delay, we are at least 25, if not 50 years away, from a next generation hydrogen powered jetliner or jet fuel from marine algae. Are we then in deep trouble? Hawaii especially, but I've learned of a new concept, for now, let's call it the "HAWAIIAN HYDROGEN CLIPPER (OR H2 CLIPPER)", which the advocates say, can be developed in a decade. While the prudent might be skeptical, I support the idea because there is nothing else on the horizon, and this idyllic spot in the Pacific would, indeed, be the ideal location to pioneer this development, for we have the political clout-P-E Barack Obama was born and grew up in this State and Senators Daniel Inouye (chairman of the full Appropriations Committee) and Senator Daniel Akaka (on Energy and Natural Resources Committee) represent Hawaii-and secondly, without a next generation sustainable air travel alternative, when jet fuel prices again skyrocket, tourism will truly collapse, and economic depression will follow.

So my plea to the Obama energy transition team is to press forth with vigor, and let me know if you would like to hear more about the H2 Clipper. Aloha.-The Dow Jones Industrials dropped a hundred points today to 8824. World markets were mixed, although Hong Kong rose by 4.45%. - Interesting that OPEC announced that it will reduce production by 2.2 million barrel/day next month...but the price crashed to 40/bbl, the lowest in 4.5 years. Mind you, this is in addition to the 2 million bbl/day cut in September. OPEC will in January produce just under 25 million bbl/day. The U.S. alone uses around 20 million bbl/day. The Energy Information Administration (which has only rarely been right), expects our current 60% imported oil percentage to drop to 40% by 2030. Today, their prediction is that oil in 2030 will be 130/barrel. A year ago, their guess was 70/barrel in 2030.-These low prices have apparently influenced Norwegian electric car company, Think, to consider giving up. There is hope that Google will keep them going, but the economics do not currently look good for non-gasoline powered vehicles. Gold rose 15/toz to 868.-

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