
Delegates react to President Barack Obama's speech during the closing night of the 2012 Democratic National Convention. (Photo by Jared Soares for PBS NewsHour)
Compare and contrast.
When then-Senator Barack Obama took the stage in Denver four years ago to accept the nomination of the Democratic Party, he delivered what many saw as a powerful and pitch-perfect speech that contained an ambitious plan to correct course after eight years of President George W. Bush. But to this reporter, sitting amongst the cheering throngs at Mile High, one point hit a decidedly sour note.
In the section on energy, which began with the understanding that the country’s economy, security and energy futures are intertwined, Obama pledged to “end our dependence on oil from the Middle East” in ten years, and also spoke of investing $150 billion in renewable energy over that same decade. But then the Democratic nominee added this:
As President, I will tap our natural gas reserves, invest in clean coal technology, and find ways to safely harness nuclear power.
And with that, at least from where I sat (politically more than physically), a soaring speech came crashing to the ground. Even four years ago, “tapping natural gas reserves” was an ominous gloss-over for dangerous drilling techniques and increased carbon emissions. “Clean coal” had already proven to be nothing better than a marketing laugh line, something the Senator from coal-producing Illinois had to say. And “find[ing] ways to safely harness nuclear power,” well, funny that, both because it, too, felt like campaign-trail noblesse oblige for some of Obama’s biggest contributors, and because it implied that a safe way to harness nuclear power was something that had not yet been found.
But there it was–what would eventually come to be known as “fracking,” plus the myth of “clean coal,” and a big nod to the moribund nuclear power industry. One, two, three strikes in Obama’s energy pitch.
Fast, uh, “forward” four years, move indoors and 2,000 miles east, and listen to what President Obama had to say about America’s energy future in his 2012 convention speech:
We’ve doubled our use of renewable energy, and thousands of Americans have jobs today building wind turbines, and long-lasting batteries. In the last year alone, we cut oil imports by one million barrels a day, more than any administration in recent history. And today, the United States of America is less dependent on foreign oil than at any time in the last two decades.
So, now you have a choice – between a strategy that reverses this progress, or one that builds on it. We’ve opened millions of new acres for oil and gas exploration in the last three years, and we’ll open more. But unlike my opponent, I will not let oil companies write this country’s energy plan, or endanger our coastlines, or collect another $4 billion in corporate welfare from our taxpayers. We’re offering a better path.
We’re offering a better path, a future where we keep investing in wind and solar and clean coal; where farmers and scientists harness new biofuels to power our cars and trucks; where construction workers build homes and factories that waste less energy; where — where we develop a hundred year supply of natural gas that’s right beneath our feet.
Yes, despite a concrete acknowledgement two minutes later that “climate change is not a hoax” and “droughts and floods and wildfires are not a joke,” the president still brags of opening “millions of new acres for oil and gas exploration in the last three years”–and then he promises to open more. And, yes, there is still a reference to the fool’s anthracite, “clean coal,” this time incongruously grouped with “wind and solar.” But notice what is not there–not in this section, not in the paragraph about the climate, not anywhere in the entire 38-minute speech.
President Obama no longer promises to “safely harness nuclear power”–that likely would have sounded like a cruel joke in a world now contaminated by the ongoing Fukushima disaster–but beyond that, he does not promise anything about nuclear power at all. There was no platitude, no carefully crafted signal to the industry that has subsidized much of Obama’s political career, no mention of nuclear power whatsoever.
That is not to say that the entire 2012 Democratic National Convention was a nuclear-free zone. A few hours before the president took the stage at the Time Warner Cable Arena, James Rogers, co-chair of the Charlotte host committee, and oh, by the way, CEO of Duke Energy, stepped to the lectern and endorsed Obama’s “all of the above” energy “strategy” (they keep using that word; I do not think it means what they think it means):
We need to work even harder toward a future of affordable, reliable and cleaner energy. That means we need to invest heavily in new zero-emission power sources, like new nuclear, wind and solar projects, as well as new technologies, like electric vehicles.
Well, if you are looking for a future of affordable, reliable and cleaner energy, you need look no further than nu–wait, what? If you are looking for those three features in an energy future, it is hard to imagine a worse option than the unsustainably expensive, chronically unreliable and dangerously dirty nuclear power plant. And, as has been discussed here many times, nuclear is not a zero-emission source, either. The massive carbon footprint of the nuclear fuel lifecycle rivals coal, and that doesn’t even consider the radioactive isotopes that facilities emit, even when they are not encountering one of their many “unusual events.”
But the CEO of the Charlotte-based energy giant probably has his eyes on a different prize. Rogers, who has been dogged by questions about a power grab after Duke’s merger with Progress Energy and his lackluster performance as fundraiser-in-chief for the DNC, sits atop a company that operates seven US nuclear power plants, and is partners in a plan to build two new AP1000 reactors in Cherokee County, South Carolina.
That last project, which is under active review by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, awaiting a combined construction and operating license, is one of a small handful of proposed new nuclear facilities currently scrambling for financing. The South Carolina plant, along with a pair of reactors in Georgia, two slated for a different site in South Carolina, and possibly one more in Tennessee, represent what industry lobbyists like to call the “nuclear renaissance.”
But completion of any of the above is nowhere close to guaranteed, and even if some of these reactors are eventually built, none will be able to generate even one kilowatt of commercial power until years after President Obama completes his sought-after second term.
Which, if you really care about America’s energy future, is, of course, all for the better. As even James Rogers noted in his speech (and he gets props for this):
[W]e cannot lose sight of energy efficiency. Because the cleanest, most efficient power plant is the one we never have to build.
That Duke’s CEO thought to highlight efficiency is interesting. That President Obama, with his well-documented ties to the nuclear industry, chose not to even mention nuclear power is important.
In the wake of Fukushima, where hundreds of thousands of Japanese have been displaced, where tens of thousands are showing elevated radiation exposure, and where thousands of children have thyroid abnormalities, no one can be cavalier about promising a safe harnessing of the atom. And in a world where radioisotopes from the breached reactors continue to turn up in fish and farm products, not only across Japan, but across the northern hemisphere, no one can pretend this is someone else’s problem.
Obama and his campaign advisors know all this and more. They know that most industrialized democracies have chosen to shift away from nuclear since the start of the Japanese crisis. They know that populations that have been polled on the matter want to see nuclear power phased out. And they know that in a time of deficit hysteria, nuclear power plants are an economic sinkhole.
And so, on a night when the president was promised one of the largest audiences of his entire campaign, he and his team decided that 2012 was not a year to throw a bone to Obama’s nuclear backers. Obama, a consummate politician, made the decision that for his second shot at casting for the future, nuclear power is political deadweight.
This is not to say that the Obama administration has thoroughly abandoned nuclear as part of its energy plan, or even its kitchen-sink rhetoric. There is no shortage of well-researched analysis detailing where the president’s deeds have failed to match his words, and it will take more than a significant omission in one speech to turn around the federal government’s policy of protecting and propping up the nuclear industry.
But the fact remains that at a convention underwritten by the head of a large nuclear energy conglomerate, nuclear energy didn’t even rate head-of-state lip service. That in a country where the nuclear industry tries desperately to brand itself as an energy of the future, the president decided to, at least rhetorically, leave it in the past. And that in a time where apostles of the atom claim that there is a nuclear rebirth, Barack Obama decided, on one of his biggest nights, that nuclear power would be better left for dead.



31 Comments

If once he did not mention nuclear energy with clean coal, fracking, and more oil drilling than Bush then that hardly constitutes backing away from nuclear energy. It is more a recognition of the realities in delivering an acceptance speech. The best indication of future behavior is past behavior and his environmental record has been worse than Bush on specifics. See Environment – http://newprogs.org/blog/2011/11/08/environment-under-democraticrepublican-uni-party
As long as environmentalists vote for democrats no matter what they can expect continued environmental destruction and endangerment of our future. After all, why should they change when they already have the votes locked up?
Thanks Gregg.
Jesus, enough already about Romney and Obama. I’ve heard everything I need to know about these two enablers. How about some lengthy incisive articles about Jill Stein (Green Party), her ideas, her reaction to these two infomercial ‘conventions’ or maybe an interview with Gary Johnson (Libertarian Party). Lets hear some solutions instead of more of this share the pain bullshit.
I’m starting to think the lack of information about two real alternatives is intentional.
Not sure it was a deliberate omission although it will be taken that way, given the stated “all of the above” policy.
It occurs to me that keeping oil and even expanding oil leases lessens political opposition of oilworkers even though their bosses are trying to buy an end to regulation and more tax credits. That has some effect in Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, North Dakota, Montana, and Wyoming. Clean coal is reassuring coal miners that his policy will not throw them out of work: that resonates in West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Kentucky, Tennesee, Indiana and especially with UMW workers. Natural gas development reassures workers in those areas that they will not be out of a job and the expansion of states through ALEC sponsored legislation means that will have some effects in some very red states.
It is an electoral statement and policy above all.
I’m not really clear how environmentalism went from a majority opinion in the 1970s to a distinctly minority opinion today. That is the fundamental political problem to be solved. I guess part of it is that those workers who have something to lose focus on that instead of the possibility of moving to new technology.
How about some diaries about the policies and plans that these alternatives are putting forward for consideration. They are buried on the candidate’s web sites. And some more diaries profiling downticket candidates in these other parties. The front page isn’t the only source of information on FDL.
right on
I don’t care what he says, I care what he does.
What happened to the $9 billion of taxpayer money he awarded to Excelon, one of his largest campaign donors in 2008.
How much have nukes, coal, HC, fracking contributed to his campaign this time.
The latter will make a better forecast of what he will do than anything he says.
And while you’re at it, what about the same figures for the Romney campaign. My metric of who the PTB have chosen for our next POTUS is $$$$. So let’s get on it.
Their websites are as useless as their speeches. Designed to lie & deceive.
A far as nuclear goes, it’s only the stupid reactors that we insist on using that are so dangerous. And the only reason we use what we use, is that those reactors produce weapons grade plutonium. If we wanted to harness nuclear power as a form of energy, we’d be using LFTRs instead. That’s not to say that solar doesn’t have a legitimate place, it does, certainly not in the retarded form of solar farms, but it does have a very important place.
So the third party web sites are IYO as bad as the Dems and Reps?
How long does it take to build any kind of nuke power plant. What % of construction costs are actual construction and what % is interest on the debt. Considering the time it takes and the interest costs, what are the comparative costs of nukes vs. alternatives, esp if alternatives were subsidized by the same amount of taxpayer welfare as nukes. What % of nuke plants have been allegedly started but not brought into service. What is the average age of nuke plants extant in world and what was their rated age when built.
That’s what you said that I was referring to.
I’d like to see more third party coverage too, but in fairness Firedoglake published a two-part interview with Jill Stein a week or so ago.
The only reason we are using what we are is that that was what was built several decades ago (during the Cold War) with fed subsidies–and state regulators in the 1970s disallowed investor utilities from charging back construction-work-in-progress to customers. Not to mention that a nuclear power plant is a big hunking investment all at once to begin with.
Has Southern Power actually started construction on the plant expansion that the Obama administration licensed two years ago?
Right. The design of most candidate and public official websites suck because they approach them from a marketing standpoint instead of a political communications standpoint.
Oh now I get your drift. You weren’t referring to the D&R candidates websites, which is what I took you to mean, but the sure-not-to-win candidates websites.
I revise my criticism. Who cares what the sure-not-to-win candidates write on their websites about alternative energy, since they are sure-not-to-win. And if I’m wrong about that, and one does win, there is less than zero chance that she would be able to enact anything she says on her website, assuming that Big Power doesn’t buy her out before she tries.
I know the A to that Q.
Big Power bought out all the academic & think tank research and infiltrated all the Green groups (or got the Greenies locked up for terrorism). And used the corp media to publish results of “research.”
Environmentalism, like other matters that are near & dear to our hearts, has been outflanked by $$$$ at every turn while we weren’t looking.
Case in point: I linked to article in a recent fatster news roundup about how eating organic food does not lead to better health. My comment was: who sponsored this research; three guesses and the first two don’t count. In the last 2 days, I’ve seen 2 articles criticizing the “study.” One points at Monsanto, the other at Cargill.
Only the original headline appeared in the corp media and the debunking articles on leftie websites.
Beat me toit!
But then, you get to field all the questions!
The BIG Q wrt nukes is the standard small-probability-large-consequence dilemma. No one has figured out a good way to analyze such issues (except Judge Posner whose book Catastrophe’s hidden agenda was to rationalize Israel’s obliteration of Palestinians; but I digress).
Living 25 miles north of Indian Point, with no viable evacuation plan (road capacity inadequate) I use bury-head-in-sand for 40-year lifespan plant that came online in 1962.
Luckily prevailing winds would take explosion radioactive waste south to Manhattan. No problem…
Oops! Sorry, I must have blinked. Thanks for the heads-up and maybe we’ll see more alternative articles instead of just rehashing how mopey we should all feel about Obama or Romney.
Everyone knows what the environmental solution is. Green energy (geothermal, wind, solar, HC sequestration?, etc) has provided the majority of the power increase, or close to it, in the past decade or two.
That is with minimal govt welfare, unlike HC energy with massive govt welfare.
But environmental solns don’t provide the campaign support.
I’d never stay in an abusive relationship but thats just me. Do as you like eCAHN…
Huh? What do abusive relations have to do with anything I typed?
Obama’s little litany of fuel solutions could go into the history books as:
A democratic president kisses Wall Street’s ass…
Meantime Germany is building a vast solar infrastructure which is already producing as much power as 3 nukes..
But you know.. Germans are notoriously starry eyed dreamers with little concept of real life engineering, and are drowning in intense sunlight.
I don’t really get why anyone cares what Obama says or doesn’t say. Hasn’t it been amply demonstrated that politicians like Obama are capricious liars? In fact, if Obama went up on stage and told everyone that he would see nuclear power ended in his next administration, then I would interpret that to mean that he will do his best to double the number of plants we currently have.
Well, there’s another BIG problem or two with nuclear power. Nuclear waste can’t be disposed of safely is the biggest. And then there’s the issues of them all leaking even without a major catastrophe. And their massive use of water. Just rounding out your argument.
Baby Step. Nuclear power must go, but Obama still touts his support for fossil fuels. If something does not change soon, in 50-100 years all of our coastal cities will be underwater, our farms will be deserts, hundreds of millions will starve, and half of the plant and animal species on earth will go extinct.
The science of a global warming catastrophe keeps getting more and more strongly confirmed, we are in the hottest year ever, and in Washington they are blissfully ignoring the issue. I am ashamed of our government and I am frightened for the future of my children and their children.
I’ve not been following the work on Thorium-based nuclear energy for a few years now. How’s progress been?
Thorium-based nuclear energy: the energy of the future. And it always will be.
Actually, it was the energy of the future… back in the early 1950′s.
Would have been a lot better off too, compared to the bomb-prone, wasteful uranium plants that our owners decreed to be the only acceptable source of fission energy.
India is phasing in thorium as part of a multistage fission research program but it takes time when you’ve basically started from scratch and the first thorium test reactors are still years away. Years, not decades.