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Why Are Greens Fiddling While Coal Burns? |
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Written by Heritage.org
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Wednesday, 08 October 2008 |
Great article by John Tierney in The New York Times
contrasting the ’soft’ Barack Obama vs ‘hard’ John McCain approaches to
America’s energy future yesterday. The soft path includes “energy
conservation and power from the sun, wind and plants” while the hard
path is more “about building nuclear power plants.” Tierney does a
great job making the case for the hard approach over the soft approach,
so read the whole thing, but his conclusion is the best part of the
piece:
By scaring people about the tiny levels of radiation
emitted during the normal operation of a nuclear plant, Mr. Tucker
says, greens have effectively encouraged the construction of coal
plants that actually release more radiation because of the traces of
uranium in coal dust. He argues that the risks of terrorist attacks and
nuclear waste have been exaggerated, particularly by the
environmentalists who objected when the Yucca Mountain nuclear-waste
depository was being designed to guarantee a level of safety for only
10,000 years.
They successfully sued to enforce a safety standard extending one
million years — which, in an ideal world, would be a very nice
standard. But if you believe global warming is a planetary crisis that
must be addressed immediately, should you really be obsessing about
hypothetical dangers near one mountain in A.D. 1,000,000? If there’s
already a proven technology that doesn’t spew carbon dioxide into the
atmosphere, why fiddle while coal burns?
Source
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