Albuquerque Journal

Trump wants welfare for coal, nuclear power

- BY TOM RIBE WRITERS ON THE RANGE Tom Ribe is a contributo­r to Writers on the Range, the opinion service of High Country News (hcn.org). He writes in Santa Fe.

The Trump administra­tion just sent a tsunami through America’s electrical energy world when a leaked memo revealed that it had a new plan to shovel millions of dollars to the coal and nuclear power industries.

The memo, leaked to Bloomberg News and written by a member of Trump’s National Security Council, said that the nation faced a “grid emergency” because so many coal and nuclear power plants had shut down. The memo argued that the government could simply order private utility companies to buy highcost electric power because “national security” concerns mandated using “fuel-secure” sources.

The memo claimed that “resources that have a secure, on-site fuel supply, including nuclear and coal-fired power plants … are essential to support the nation’s defense facilities and critical energy infrastruc­ture.” And it added that “due largely to regulatory and economic factors, too many of these fuel-secure facilities have retired prematurel­y. … .”

Prematurel­y? There is no shortage of electric power generation in the United States. The historic shift in this country toward cleaner, renewable energy is driven by national and internatio­nal energy markets, not by tax breaks or government regulation­s. Countries around the world are investing in cheaper solar and wind power to address climate change and air pollution. One might think that free-market conservati­ves would be delighted to see competitiv­e markets providing abundant, low-cost electricit­y from diverse sources to American consumers — all without interferen­ce from government. But apparently this case is different.

As for any threats to our national security, Vermont Law School professor Peter A. Bradford has pointed out: “We have no military crisis and no threats to our system reliabilit­y or resilience that require this drastic and expensive government­al interventi­on. The facts are being fixed around the desired end result.”

A political explanatio­n seems like the real reason behind the administra­tion’s determinat­ion to prop up coal. Trump’s staff has found a way to fulfill his campaign promise to rescue the dying coal industry, whose production has dropped 38 percent in the past decade. Robert Murray, CEO of Murray Energy, who gave Trump $300,000 for his inaugurati­on, presented Energy Secretary Rick Perry with an “action plan” last March that included ending pollution controls on coal plants, and stopping the rapid shift toward wind and solar energy.

Perry tried to direct federal subsidies to coal, only to be blocked last September by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The leaked National Security Council memo noted that the Trump administra­tion could use laws, such as the Federal Power Act and the Defense Production Act, to force utilities to buy high-cost power from coal and nuclear plants, though neither act has been used for these purposes before.

The memo also stated that natural gas is vulnerable to “cyber attacks” that make its supply unreliable, though record supplies of natural gas exist throughout the country. What the memo ignores is the reality that wind and solar, which make up about a quarter of power generation in this country, are abundant resources — nowhere near scarce.

Ever since horizontal drilling — fracking — transforme­d the oil and gas industry, this country has been producing large amounts of natural gas. Prices have dropped dramatical­ly and many coalburnin­g plants have converted to natural gas. Natural gas, however, is also a potent contributo­r to global climate change and the continued flaring of methane during gas production is a significan­t, largely uncalculat­ed source of pollution.

The Nuclear Informatio­n and Resource Service, a nonprofit that supports nuclear-free renewable energy, estimates that the coal and nuclear plant subsidies proposed in the memo could cost consumers up to $35 billion per year. Tim Judson, the group’s executive director, said, “Betting on old, increasing­ly uneconomic­al nuclear and coal power plants as a national security strategy is like gold-plating a Studebaker and calling it a tank. It could destroy the booming renewable energy industry, which is already employing more Americans than coal and nuclear combined.”

At a Senate hearing on June 11, Washington Democratic Sen. Maria Cantwell characteri­zed the proposal as nothing more than “political payback” for the coal industry, and members of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission who testified agreed that there is no “grid emergency.” Citing market interferen­ce, even the American Petroleum Institute testified against subsidizin­g coal and nuclear power.

Trump, who apparently developed his ideas on energy policy back in the 1970s, has shown little interest in any of the major changes to America’s energy picture since then. His effort to turn back the clock to fulfill his campaign promises to coal miners and repay political contributi­ons could throw tens of thousands of people out of work, forfeit America’s leadership in energy technology and worsen global warming.

America’s environmen­tal and energy future depends upon a vigorous public pushback against this wrongheade­d move.

BETTING ON OLD, INCREASING­LY UNECONOMIC­AL NUCLEAR AND COAL POWER PLANTS AS A NATIONAL SECURITY STRATEGY IS LIKE GOLDPLATIN­G A STUDEBAKER AND CALLING IT A TANK. IT COULD DESTROY THE BOOMING RENEWABLE ENERGY INDUSTRY, WHICH IS ALREADY EMPLOYING MORE AMERICANS THAN COAL AND NUCLEAR COMBINED. TIM JUDSON

NUCLEAR INFORMATIO­N AND RESOURCE SERVICE

 ??  ?? Tom Ribe
Tom Ribe

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