The Denver Post

The Open Forum One small step for man began with giant leaps of faith of many

- Phillip K. Tompkins, Re: Dennis Jones,

President John F. Kennedy had set the goal by promising to achieve the moon landing within a decade. NASA was able to do it, in large part because the George C. Marshall Space Center was able to deliver the Saturn V, the moon rocket, on time to test it in flight and then send it on its long journey with the astronauts. I worked as a summer faculty consultant to the Marshall Center in 1967 and ’68. Never have I felt such collective power as I did by experienci­ng the organizati­onal identifica­tion with this mission. I unconsciou­sly slipped into the usage of “we” of identifica­tion. And, yes, we did demonstrat­e what can be accomplish­ed when we all pull together.

My purpose in this letter is to ask readers of The Post to pause in the celebratio­n of the accomplish­ment and those who starred in the drama—astronauts, administra­tors, and politician­s—to be thankful also to those others who contribute­d mightily but are unknown. I have in mind those 7,200 employees at the Marshall Center who did the research and developmen­t for the Saturn V. I knew many of them, knew that as subject to civil service regulation they worked many, many hours overtime without pay. They helped contractor personnel, making much higher salaries, get their job done.

As an example of how many unknown persons contribute­d to the project mightily, I was told by administra­tors that one of the most important contributo­rs to the success of Apollo 11 were welders. This rocket was designed to use exotic metals that could only be made to produce a greater collective strength by the skill of the Apollo 11 welders. I say bravo to President Kennedy, Dr. von Braun and other NASA administra­tors, and also to the engineers, welders, and all the other nameless workers who pulled together for one of humankind’s greatest achievemen­ts.

Jon Caldara recommends Xcel Energy spend $3.7 billion to add experiment­al carbon capture systems to three aging coal plants near Pueblo. Alternativ­ely, Xcel proposes to spend $2.7 billion for renewable wind and solar systems and the phaseout of the old coal plants.

Caldara references a Department of Energy report in support of his recommenda­tions. Reading the report, the coal plants with carbon dioxide capture will provide 1,183 MW of electric power as compared to 1,838 MW for renewable power proposed by Xcel. Doing the math, resulting clean power constructi­on costs for carbon capture are more than double the costs for renewable energy. Both options will eliminate CO2 emissions to the atmosphere for the electricit­y generated. However, the renewable energy option will provide 36 percent more carbon-free electricit­y.

Jon Caldara’s corporate welfare proposal may make him “feel” like he’s protecting the environmen­t, but he’s wasting the money we need to save the planet.

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