advertisement
About Energy Industry

Business in the energy industry is fast paced and ever-changing. BNET Energy provides daily news coverage for managers and executives in the energy sector, with coverage on the major utilities, energy companies, clean tech and renewable energy businesses. BNET Energy offers in depth analysis of green business, the very latest in energy research, alliances and partnerships, competitive intelligence and a host of other global energy industry issues.

On Earth Day, Obama Touts Wind Energy, Limbaugh Celebrates Plastic Bags

By Kirsten Korosec | Apr 22, 2009

It’s Earth Day - the perfect time to reflect on what’s in store this year for the energy industry.  And what better way to illustrate the challenges the industry — that’s everything from oil and coal to solar and wind energy — is facing this year then to take a look at the polar opposite approaches of President Obama and conservative talk show host Rush Limbaugh to Earth Day.

That’s not to say Obama and Limbaugh represent the only two stances within the energy industry on issues such as global warming, carbon tax versus cap-and-trade of emissions and whether to open up more offshore drilling leases in the Gulf of Mexico.

But it does depict the distance in which many energy execs and regular citizens will have to travel to reach a compromise that will tackle how to make the U.S. energy independent, efficient and “green” without cannabiliziing existing businesses and jobs.

The Christian Science Monitor today posted a blog about the decidedly different activities of Obama and Limbaugh for Earth Day. The White House kicked off the day with its all-day live blog on a variety of Earth day initiatives and activities. At 9:20 a.m., for example, the blog posted information on the U.S. Coast Guard’s Earth Day Twitter Campaign. Later, the White House released this proclamation by Obama on Earth Day, which basically talks about the need to take action and preserve natural resources while stimulating economic growth. Obama also is visiting workers at Trinity Structural Towers, a former Maytag plant turned green facility that produces wind towers in Iowa, where he will largely focus on green job creation.

Limbaugh, on the other hand, will spend Earth Day celebrating coal, cars, plastic bags and light bulbs.

“Normally, those of us with sanity sit Earth Day out, while schools frighten kids with apocalyptic tales of the earth being destroyed, because we enjoy a high standard of living,” Limbaugh said in his show last week, according to the CSM article.

In his show this morning, Limbaugh said he was having all of his cars driven, his plane flown to Los Angeles and back, cranking up his air conditioning, eating beef and will “personally” oversee the destruction of two acres of rainforest, according to Limbaugh Wire, an hour-by-hour coverage of his show on Media Matters for America.

I’m sure that Limbaugh had some environmentalist blood boiling this morning with his comments. Put that aside for a moment and go back to what I mentioned earlier about “the distance in which many will have to travel to reach a compromise.”

Industry execs and politicos alike will get to measure that distance this year as it tries to prop up the economy, preserve jobs and grapples with climate change legislation. And they’ll get to measure it sooner rather than later. Just yesterday, Congress took up the sticky prospect of climate change legislation yesterday, which will address the issue of placing mandatory caps on emissions from burning fossil fuels.  

Image by Flickr user kimberlyfaye, CC 2.0

Kirsten Korosec has been a print and online journalist for more than 10 years covering education, politics and business.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Scale of the power challenge

    Financial Times - 110 days 22 hours 7 minutes ago

    The scale of the challenge facing energy policy is illustrated by the list of planned investments in electricity generation compiled by New Power, the industry journal, writes Ed Crooks . Companies have set out plans or begun construction on 30,000MW of gas-fired generation, compared with about 8,100MW of coal-fired power, 1,800MW for onshore...

  • Solar Industry Takes on Coal and Oil Lobbies

    New York Times - 27 days 6 hours 5 minutes ago

    A solar industry leader smacked down the oil and coal industries on Tuesday, calling for renewable energy proponents to open their wallets to level the playing field in Washington. “The full promise of solar power is being restrained by the tyranny of policies that protect our competitors, subsidize wealthy polluters and disadvantage green...

  • Defining a â??New Normalâ?? in the Wine Biz

    Wine & Spirits Daily - 4 days 1 hour 31 minutes ago

    Dear Client: The wine industry must prepare itself for â??a new normalâ?? in the next couple of years, said Rob McMillan, founder of Silicon Valley Bankâ??s Wine Division and author of the annual State of the Wine Industry Report. The wine industry will continue to feel effects of the recession, â??and there is no expectation that what was...

  • China Pushing Solar Like Never Before

    Business Insider - 7 days 21 hours 30 minutes ago

    At the 2010 China Industrial Development Forum on November 7th, Chinese officials reaffirmed their commitment to alternative energy, particularly solar, according to visit note by Goldman Sachs. Goldman: Solar power is the other rapidly developing industry in China as China now accounts for about 1/3 of solar power production capacity...

  • Natural Gas: The Rodney Dangerfield of Fuels

    GreenBiz.com - 146 days 8 hours 38 minutes ago

    In the energy and climate change debate, environmentalists are mostly united in their feelings about coal (very bad), gasoline (avoid gas guzzlers), nuclear energy (scary), hydropower (small is better than big), wind (good unless you worry about birds), solar thermal (nifty) and rooftop solar PV (even niftier). But what about natural gas?

Links from the Web Buzz:
 

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
advertisement
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement