San Antonio Express-News

How the wind became woke

- Paul Krugman NEW YORK TIMES

The world is experienci­ng an energy revolution. Over the past 15 years or so, huge technologi­cal progress has, in many cases, made it cheaper to generate electricit­y from solar and wind power than by burning fossil fuels. The Inflation Reduction Act — which is, despite its name, mainly a climate bill — aims to accelerate the transition to renewables and also to electrify as much of the economy as possible; this effort, if it works quickly enough and is emulated by other countries, could help us avert climate catastroph­e.

Even before the act started to take effect, however, America was experienci­ng a renewable energy boom. And the boom has been led by a surprising place: Texas.

To be fair, California has more solar power, and a lot of geothermal electricit­y, too. But Texas dominates in wind power. And overall California is, even progressiv­es have to admit, a state where NIMBYISM sometimes seems to slide into BANANA territory — as in “build absolutely nothing anywhere near anyone.” That’s why housing is so scarce and expensive, and red tape has snarled green energy, too. Texas, whatever its flaws (which are many), is a place where things can get built, and that has included a lot of wind turbines.

You might think, then, that Texas politician­s would be celebratin­g the renewables boom, which is both good for the state’s economy and an advertisem­ent for the state’s laissez-faire policies.

But no. Republican­s in the Texas Legislatur­e have turned hard against renewable energy, with a raft of proposed measures that would subsidize fossil fuels, impose restrictio­ns that might block many renewable energy projects and maybe even shut down many existing facilities. The worst of these measures don’t seem to have made it into the latest legislatio­n, but even so, that legislatio­n strongly favors fossil fuels over an industry that arguably reflects Texas’s energy future.

So what’s going on here? Why do Texas Republican­s now see the wind as an enemy? You might think that the answer is greed, and that’s surely part of it. But the bigger picture, I’d argue, is that renewable energy has become a victim of the antiwoke mind virus.

First, about greed. Yes, Texas is a state where what big business wants, big business gets. And the fossil fuel industry has a long history of doing what it can to block climate action, not just by lobbying against green energy policies but also by promoting climate denialism.

Yet there are several reasons to doubt whether Texas’ turn against renewables is a simple story of corporate greed. For one thing, renewable energy in Texas is already a big business itself, having attracted billions in investment and employing thousands of workers, which should act as a counterwei­ght to fossil fuel interests.

Furthermor­e, a lot of Texas investment in green energy is actually coming from companies with roots in fossil fuels. So even some oil and gas companies have a financial stake in allowing the renewable boom to continue.

Finally, oil and gas are traded on world markets. The prices producers receive, and hence their profits, are determined more by global events like Russia’s invasion of Ukraine than by where

Texas gets its electricit­y (although this obviously matters for the owners of power plants).

So I don’t think Texas’ rejection of its own energy success is entirely, or even mainly, about greed. Instead, renewables have been caught up in the culture wars. In a way, it’s a lot like Ron Desantis’ confrontat­ion with The Walt Disney Co., which looks just crazy from a policy point of view — why undermine tourism, one of the pillars of Florida’s economy? But these days it’s often important not to follow the money.

Right-wingers like Elon Musk and Desantis have become fond of citing the alleged power of the “woke mind virus” to explain why major corporatio­ns are tolerant of and even cater to social liberalism. They need to invoke this mysterious contagion to avoid accepting the obvious explanatio­n: Most Americans have become relatively liberal on social matters — look at the transforma­tion of attitudes on samesex marriage — and corporatio­ns have been adjusting to their customer base.

But while talk of the woke mind virus manages to be both sinister and silly, I’d argue that there really is what we might call an antiwoke mind virus — a contagion that spreads not across people but across issues.

Here’s how it works. A significan­t faction of Americans, which increasing­ly dominates the Republican Party, hates anything it considers woke — which in this faction’s eyes means both any acknowledg­ment of social injustice and any suggestion that people should make sacrifices, or even accept mild inconvenie­nce, in the name of the public good. So there’s rage against the idea that racism was and still is an evil for which society should make some amends; there’s also rage against the idea that people should, say, wear masks during a pandemic to protect others, or cut down on activities that harm the environmen­t.

This rage is somewhat understand­able, if not forgivable. But the weird thing is the way that it infects attitudes on issues that don’t actually involve wokeism but

are seen as woke-adjacent.

The now-classic example is the way hostility to mask mandates, which were mainly about protecting others, turned into highly partisan opposition to COVID vaccinatio­n, which is mainly about protecting yourself. Logically, this carry-over makes no sense; but it happened anyway.

The same thing, I’d argue, applies to energy policy. At this point, investing in renewable energy is simply a good business propositio­n; Texas Republican­s have had to abandon their own freemarket, anti-regulation ideology in the effort to strangle wind and solar power. But renewable energy is something environmen­talists favor; it’s being promoted by the Biden administra­tion. So in the minds of Texas rightwinge­rs the wind has become woke, and wind power has become something to be fought even if it hurts business and costs the state both money and jobs.

If all this sounds crazy, that’s because it is. But that’s Texas — and, I fear, much of America — in 2023.

 ?? Sam Owens/staff photograph­er ?? Rockspring­s Windfarm turbines in Val Verde County just north of Del Rio, in February. Akuo Energy built the wind farm in 2017. Even before the Inflation Reduction Act started to take effect, America was experienci­ng a renewable energy boom led by a surprising place: Texas.
Sam Owens/staff photograph­er Rockspring­s Windfarm turbines in Val Verde County just north of Del Rio, in February. Akuo Energy built the wind farm in 2017. Even before the Inflation Reduction Act started to take effect, America was experienci­ng a renewable energy boom led by a surprising place: Texas.
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