Las Vegas News, Sports, Business, Entertainment and Classifieds

Las Vegas Review-Journal - News

Saturday
Mar 13, 2010
Partly Sunny
Partly Sunny 59° Weather Forecast

RECENT EDITIONS
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat

sponsored by
News


Green energy is good economics, former President Clinton says




Quit piddling around!

That was the earnest exhortation from former President Bill Clinton, who spoke to a sold-out crowd of 900 attendees at today's National Clean Energy Summit 2.0 at UNLV.


Most Popular Stories
  1. Reid's wife, daughter hospitalized after accident
  2. Rulffes says school layoffs likely
  3. Doctors say outlook 'very good' for Landra Reid as she recovers from neck surgery
  4. Gibbons rejects four-day work week
  5. Experts: Dangers await Las Vegas if city fires, rehires workers
  6. Phantom recalls former co-star
  7. Pilot dies when small plane crashes near Boulder City Airport
  8. Mother, her boyfriend charged in child's death
  9. Hepatitis outbreak case reaches grand jury
  10. Budget troubles might mean end for program that serves nine skate parks




In a wide-ranging speech, Clinton referred repeatedly to the 7 million jobs the nation has lost since the recession's 2007 beginning. He talked of restoring some of those jobs by unlocking private capital locked down in an ongoing credit freeze, and he urged the nation to take what Nevada is doing and put it on steroids to develop a green economy.

But achieving those goals will first require convincing naysayers that green energy can be good economics, Clinton said. It's a particularly relevant point to make in Nevada, with its nation-leading foreclosure rate and 12.3 percent joblessness.

Focusing on energy efficiency and clean power wouldn't just create jobs; it would reap huge savings for consumers and give the environment a major boost, Clinton said. The American Council for Energy Efficiency has said investments in retrofitting and green fuel would cut $2 trillion from Americans' power bills by 2050, and such investments would provide up to half of the greenhouse-gas emissions cuts a law pending before the Senate would require, Clinton said.

What's more, a Kinsey report found that a $520 billion investment in weatherization and energy retrofitting nationwide would cut energy for heating and power generation by 23 percent and allow consumers to save $1.2 trillion. Closing 22 percent of the country's older, smaller coal-fired power plants would cut coal-plant emissions by half or more.

"I say all this because, while some things have been done, we're in a country that has just lost 7 million jobs," Clinton said. "We're still just playing with this."

For an idea of the job formation that could accompany a more serious effort, Clinton reeled off a comparison of employment growth by energy type. Every $1 billion invested in a coal-fired power plant creates about 800 jobs. Investing $1 billion in a solar thermal plant generates 1,900 jobs. Wind energy performs better yet, with $1 billion yielding 3,300 jobs. And building retrofits for energy efficiency? They create 6,000 positions for every $1 billion invested, Clinton said.

Clinton pointed to $18 billion in federal funds, including $13 million for Nevada, directed toward such retrofits. Retrofitting 40 percent of the nation's buildings in 40 years would create 625,000 sustained jobs.

"But we are still piddling with this," Clinton said. "We have to figure out how to do it on a national scale and show how it can be done on an international scale."

Clinton said he's convinced the public remains cool to renewable energy and retrofits because the sector lacks "parallel financing," and because costs come up front while benefits materialize over many years. The consumer who wants to borrow money for home retrofits will find that such loans are fairly expensive and don't have terms lasting more than a year or two.

Clinton suggested two solutions: Decoupling utility revenues from electricity sales, so that power companies can earn profits even as they sell less electricity; and freeing $520 billion from banks, who, Clinton said, currently have $900 billion in cash on hand that they haven't yet committed to loans.

One innovation that could help unlock those dollars would be a retrofit-loan program similar to the U.S. Small Business Administration's business-loan guarantees, Clinton suggested. Capitalize it on a ratio of one to 10, then that $18 billion in retrofit funds appropriated in the federal stimulus bill becomes $180 billion with loan programs.

"You've got to get the banks involved in this if you want to quit piddling around," Clinton said. "We don't need 625,000 jobs gradually built over 10 years. We need 3 million jobs today."

Local initiatives that "put local consumers in a just-say-yes position" will help as well. For example, some counties allow homeowners to pay off retrofits over a period of years on their property-tax burden. And the federal Energy Department is working on plans to let people build improvements into their monthly mortgage payments.

"We need to pick the low-hanging fruit. We've lost 7 million jobs. No one is thinking about this on a scale. It is so simple." Clinton offered another suggestion for goosing the green economy.

He proposed a program similar to Cash for Clunkers that would target buyers of electric cars. Such an initiative could provide $10,000 for car buyers trading in internal-combustion cars.

"(Cash for Clunkers) has worked like a dream. It proves the American people will bite if it makes good economic sense," he said. Clinton urged attendees to reach for more than Congress and state legislatures have delivered.

"Don't be satisfied with $40 billion in 10 years. Do it all in the next five years. Put millions to work and prove this is the right thing to do. Let's get some way for the American financial and enterprise system to be able to work again to prove this is good business."

 

Contact reporter Jennifer Robison at jrobison@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-4512.

 

Newsvine Digg Fark Technorati reddit StumbleUpon del.icio.us Slashdot Propeller Mixx Furl Twitter MySpace Facebook Google Bookmarks Yahoo! Bookmarks Windows Live Favorites Ask MyStuff myAOL Favorites

Leave Your Comment 15 Reader Comments
Terms & Conditions
The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The reviewjournal.com does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please notify the web editor.

Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 48 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.
Current Word Count:

Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.

Report abuse

workerbee wrote on August 10, 2009 11:54 PM: Slick willy go home.
How did slick willy have a budget surplus, he move the military fiscal budget one day so it would shift the entire years spending. And yes a lot of people died because they new to much, just ask Vince Foster, oops you can't because he's dead! If you'd educate your self you'd know what slime balls the Clintons really are.
The bottom line is the media persuades the public from the real candidates, they push people like yamamba and mcamnesty, wake up people!


Report abuse

GFT wrote on August 10, 2009 11:07 PM: I thought it was taboo to do anything in Las Vegas...

Didn't they get the message from Obama?


Report abuse

Interesting News wrote on August 10, 2009 10:43 PM: Mr. Clinton is in Las Vegas on Monday as one of the marquee speakers at the National Clean Energy Summit, put together by Harry Reid of Nevada, the Senate majority leader. The event has drawn a pretty impressive turn-out, from former Vice President Al Gore to the wealthy oilman T. Boone Pickens.

But it became clear that something else was afoot in this sweltering desert city when some of Mr. Clinton’s friends – the kind who would appear not to have a particular interest or expertise in the kind of summit Mr. Reid has arranged – were spotted on the Vegas strip.

Turns out Mr. Clinton decided to celebrate his 63rd birthday with a dinner at one of this city’s hottest – and most pricey – restaurants: Craftsteak at the MGM Grand hotel. How pricey? The 8-ounce wagyu New York strip steak goes for $240. (Potatoes and other sides are extra.)

Among those who are on the list:

Terry McAuliffe, the former leader of the Democratic National Committee who is Mr. Clinton’s long-time friend and golfing buddy
Paul Begala, a senior adviser from his 1992 presidential campaign
John D. Podesta, a former White House chief of staff under Mr. Clinton
Haim Saban, a friend, Hollywood executive and significant financial contributor to Mr. Clinton and his efforts
Steve Bing, the Hollywood media mogul who has become one of Mr. Clinton’s best friends and regularly lends him his private jet. (Most recently, Mr. Clinton used the jet for his trip to North Korea, where he helped negotiate the release of two American journalists who worked for Mr. Gore.
Jay Carson, a former communications director for Mr. Clinton.
As of Monday afternoon, it is not clear that Mr. Gore – who appears to have had something of a rapprochement with Mr. Clinton after the North Korea rescue mission – was going to be


Report abuse

Stacy wrote on August 10, 2009 08:15 PM: Obama is so weak as a president he has to call on Bill Clinton to get anything done in this world. Obama could not get 2 spys out of North Korea.


Report abuse

amydugan wrote on August 10, 2009 07:48 PM: i wish he was still president
check out my Bill Clinton blog
http://adugan-billclintonblog.blogspot.com/


Report abuse

Jim wrote on August 10, 2009 06:42 PM: Welcome to Soviet Amerika!


Report abuse

Tim Hall wrote on August 10, 2009 06:20 PM: Good to see Bill back! Yes, he may have lied, but no one died because of it!


Report abuse

WHY??? wrote on August 10, 2009 05:59 PM: Why is Clinton holding up a rice-cake???
Let me guess --- it will supply all the world's energy needs.


Report abuse

Lawrence Hyde wrote on August 10, 2009 05:52 PM: Hey, wait a minute. How did I end up with a bridge in Death Valley?


Report abuse

button down the hatch wrote on August 10, 2009 05:51 PM: I hope Bill isn't without supervision in vegas to many temptations for a man with his prior problems. Hey Al Gore, how much jet fuel did you burn to get your self to vegas? And the tortoise huggers are not going to let you disturb the unknown numbers of tortoises in this county. Then what will you do for land?


Read All Comments