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NATIONAL CLEAN ENERGY SUMMIT: Gore argues for alternative power, conservation

Climate change, dwindling petroleum reserves among reasons cited for going green

An all-day Monday powwow featuring some of the country's best-known policymakers yielded an array of suggestions for boosting the nation's green-energy economy.

The suggestions from more than 25 panelists and speakers at the National Clean Energy Summit 2.0 could substantially help shape proposed federal legislation in the next year. If Monday's discussions offer any indication, Americans can expect a coming congressional emphasis on home and office weatherization, a focus on finding dollars for alternative-energy power plants, carbon cap-and-trade regulations and creation of a national renewable energy portfolio mandate for electric utilities.


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  • But first, former Vice President Al Gore, a longtime advocate of green economic measures, made the case for advancing alternative energy and conservation.

    It sounds "shrill" to say global warming threatens human civilization, but the alarmist nature of the message is no reason to discount it, Gore told a sold-out crowd of 900 inside Cox Pavilion at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

    A week-old study on the world's oil supply found the planet's petroleum reserves dwindling faster than previously thought, Gore said. That means more roller-coaster rides in oil prices, and future energy shocks for consumers.

    Humans also dump 70 million tons of planet-warming pollution into the atmosphere every 24 hours, Gore said.

    "This is madness," Gore said. "We owe it to ourselves, our children and our grandchildren. Who are we to make the decision to keep on being so wasteful and destructive in the teeth of warnings from every single prestigious science organization on this planet? Our kids will ask, 'Didn't you know? Didn't you care? Didn't you notice the thousand-year-droughts and the 500-year floods? What were you all doing, watching 'American Idol'?'"

    UNLV professor Keith Schwer also addressed the crowd, noting that Clark County's unemployment rate is 12.3 percent, and the region could use the economic boost that would come with a greener economy.

    Schwer said Las Vegas and Nevada ranked as the country's fastest-growing state in the last several years of the 20th century because of its entrepreneurial spirit and its citizens' ability to find advantages other states didn't have.

    Southern Nevada should now turn that entrepreneurial spirit toward green energy, Schwer said. Focusing on renewables such as solar power and wind energy would make the Silver State an exporter of energy, similar to Texas and Oklahoma.

    There will be job upheaval for older sectors of the economy, Schwer said, but that was the case for makers of buggy whips when the automobile emerged as an economic and industrial force.

    "We shouldn't be afraid of that," Schwer said. "We should continue to make transformations to drive the economy and make sure we have economic prosperity for our grandchildren."

    John Podesta, a former White House chief of staff and current chief executive officer of the Center for American Progress Action Fund, emphasized the boost weatherization efforts would provide the nation's economy. Retrofitting 50 million homes and small commercial buildings would create 625,000 jobs in construction and manufacturing, and would save consumers up to $64 billion a year.

    Senate Majority Harry Reid, D-Nev., and the event's host, noted that Monday was the anniversary of the day in 1776 that word of the American colonies' Declaration of Independence reached London.

    "We're firing the first shots of a new revolution to regain prosperity and restore American leadership," Reid said. "It's a clean-energy revolution to create millions of jobs nationwide and thousands of jobs in Nevada -- good, new jobs in construction, manufacturing and engineering."

    Plus, those jobs couldn't be outsourced.

    Reid also said in postsummit press conference that developing a nationwide "smart" power grid would be a top legislative priority. Such a grid would make it possible to transmit renewable energies of all types to markets nationwide.

    Energy Secretary Steven Chu said no clean-energy plan would be complete without a system to tax carbon emissions.

    "Yes, we're going to have a cap on carbon, and we're going to ratchet it down as we build up the system," Chu said.

    Chu also said it's "wishful thinking" to believe global warming isn't happening.

    "The cost of inaction is horrendous," he said.

    Several panelists called for a national renewable-energy portfolio standard like the one Nevada has. Nevada law requires that 25 percent of the state's power come from alternative sources by 2025.

    Danny Thompson, head of the Nevada chapter of the AFL-CIO, noted that Nevada's portfolio standard, instituted about a decade ago, gave the state's utilities incentive to push construction of the nation's largest photovoltaic array, a 72,000-panel, 14-megawatt solar plant that supplies the Nellis Air Force Base with more than 25 percent of its power. Thompson also pointed to several solar plants in the Eldorado Valley, south of Boulder City.

    "These plants happened because we set a standard," Thompson said.

    Michael Yackira, chief executive officer of NV Energy, said the company's $300 million investment in developing a smart grid to transmit green power will create 200 jobs, including positions to change out old meters.

    The local power utility is also funding classes in renewable-energy engineering at UNLV and the University of Nevada, Reno.

    The conference is important because policy prescriptions in past summits have made their way into federal law.

    Last year's summit, also at UNLV, produced talk of tax breaks for renewable-energy companies that create jobs and billions of dollars for a national smart grid to transmit alternative power. Funds for both were in February's stimulus bill. In the last year, federal lawmakers have appropriated more than $60 billion for clean-energy projects.

    Also appearing at Monday's event were Labor Secretary Hilda Solis, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, oilman T. Boone Pickens, and Nevada Senate Majority Leader Steven Horsford, D-Las Vegas.

    Gov. Jim Gibbons wasn't invited to the event, and he said that the snub suggested the gathering was more about partisan politics than solving energy problems.

    "Reid invited California's governor and did not invite Nevada's governor. That can only suggest that Reid is interested in helping renewable energy projects in California and not Nevada," Gibbons spokesman Dan Burns said by e-mail.

    Contact reporter Jennifer Robison at jrobison@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-4512. Review-Journal writer Benjamin Spillman contributed to this report.

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    Peter Lowenstein wrote on August 11, 2009 11:09 PM: All I see here are idiotic old people mad at Al Gore for everything in the world they don't like. Dumb people who will never earn millions ... who act as though they will. They buy into the corporate PR machine dribble and the poli-tainers like Rush Windbag and O'Reily (on Fox the company that brings you reality TV and super liberal stuff like the Simpsons). America is proof that humanity is doomed.


    Mike Lopez wrote on August 11, 2009 11:05 PM: More coal fire plants in Nevada I say ... I totally agree with the nutty republicans. Heck lets build some coal fire plants IN Las Vegas. I mean our environment here ... we don't have one right. Its the desert ... there is no life out there anyway. Honestly we missed the boat on Yucca too ... not making a joke here. Nevada could really have been something by being the landfill for the rest of the nation. We can still do it, there is hope yet! Vote Republican and do whatever you can to support the coal industry! Or just be an idiot and rant and rave against Gore. You guys know there is a Dub fan club also a Dan Quail fan club ... are those of you ranting against ole Al Gore (internet inventor) members? Really the point is ... WHO CARES ABOUT AL GORE you dummies. Let it go ... and who cares about the oil industry studies proclaiming there is no problem or the Greenpeace studies proclaiming we have 3 days left to live. We all know the truth is somewhere in the middle. The message is we do need to use more sustainable, domestic energy sources. It would be good for our economy to NOT HAVE TO BUY OUR power (via oil) from the middle east. While Coal might be cheap today ... it has its long term costs ... which we tax payers will be on the hook for. Why not look for more and more sustainable (solar, wind, geo, etc.) sources of power. Its common sense ... its not conservative or liberal. Stop letting the media and corporate PR machine tell you how to think!


    Gore has NO CREDIBILITY! wrote on August 11, 2009 05:14 PM: "Green" nonsense, IS nonsense. Besides, who really gives a dam. The dam planet will be here whether we're here or not. Personally, I could not give hoot.


    Ken wrote on August 11, 2009 12:38 PM: How many private jets came to town for this event? You know Manbearpig and Clinton aren't sharing a ride.

    And why exactly is Obergruppenfuhrer Reid favoring California? Is the ever loyal to those who contribute Reid under orders to ignore people from his home state in order to revive the California economy? Sure looks that way.

    I guess Harry must feel that he can throw Nevada a bone by holding the conference here while focusing the show on how best to help California.


    rmolnar wrote on August 11, 2009 12:29 PM: Don't pick on Al Gore. After all, he invented the Internet and the book "Love Story" was based on him.


    vegasdomar wrote on August 11, 2009 12:13 PM: I'm continually amazed in this day of the Internet and easy availability of information: this blowhard is still listened to.
    All anyone has to do is look up this jet setting major Google stockholder and green energy investor and see how phony he is.
    He and Clinton remind me of Mutt and Jeff with luxury jets.
    Wonder how much the Chi Coms are paying him to put cap and trade over our necks and which Chinese industries are going to be the ones to sell the solar panels and wind turbines.
    Pretty simple to figure out what's really going on here.
    It's called follow the money.
    In this case it's follow the money and the major wind coming from the eastern folks.


    miraje wrote on August 11, 2009 09:07 AM: The greenies tend to forget that old truism, "It's the economy, stupid". You can't bang a square peg into a round hole, and windmills and pipe dreams won't power a modern economy.

    When people realize that these greenie policies are indeed pipe dreams, and expensive job and economy killing ones at that, there will be an inevitable backlash.


    Ken wrote on August 11, 2009 07:39 AM: What is the rest of the world going to do? Nothing, so cap and trade will make Al richer and all of the rest poorer.
    We need to get the whole world involved, not just U.S. or it makes no differance what we do.
    Green energy is good and we need it, but cap and trade is useless.


    Hard Times wrote on August 11, 2009 07:30 AM: Have you all opened your accounts with the Chicago Climate Futures Exchange (CCFE) yet? Better get in on that action before it's too late. It's all set to really take off once Congress passes the "cap and trade" legislation.

    Take a look at the firms handling the trading. They look like the Who's Who of big money, many of them recipients of taxpayer bailouts.

    -- http://www.ccfe.com/about_ccfe/clearingFirms.html --

    CCFE is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX). CCX has affiliates in Europe (ECX), Canada (MCeX) and elsewhere around the planet.

    -- http://www.chicagoclimatex.com/ --

    This is a really big deal. Al Gore is co-founder of Generation Investment Management LLP, an associate member of CCX.

    -- http://www.generationim.com/about/ --

    So, fellow citizens, stop whining and do something good for the planet. Invest in carbon futures, and you won't have to worry about paying your power bills, which are sure to rise with "cap and trade."


    John B wrote on August 11, 2009 03:49 AM: Every time we are told to conserve the water and power utilities increase our rates to make up the lost revenue. What is the consumer's incentive to conserve when we are the ones who once again pay for these great ideas?


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