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The Brown on Green Report: Is Paul Ryan My Clean Energy Buddy?

Posted: 08/23/2012 5:40 pm

By now everyone knows that Mitt Romney's new friend, Paul Ryan, is a fiscal conservative. We also know he's a climate denier so the environmental community is going nuts... but I think they are out of sync. Paul Ryan is going to be their best friend. Maybe mine, too. I'm an investor in "clean" energy, as in anything that works to provide energy (or use energy) that reduces the impact of too much carbon.

Ryan is going to be our best buddy whether he knows it or not. In fact, as a clean energy investor, I think he improves the likelihood that those of us investing in a better future are going to see increased demand for the innovative technologies we've backed and the chance to make a whole lot of money in the process.

Now Ryan might not have figured this out. That's okay! In fact, I'm counting on it but then he will be thinking that guys like Richard Muller used to be his friend. However, Muller has done the unthinkable. As a well-known professor of Physics at UC Berkeley, once a spokesperson for the climate change "denier" community, he changed his mind. Paul Ryan, believe me, is NEVER going to change his mind that climate change is nonsense.

If he has his way, the U.S. will never become part of any international agreement on carbon. For him, fiscal conservation outdoes environmental conservation. So it's a really, really easy decision to stop the U.S. government from funding anything remotely connected to fixing the problem. Instead, Ryan's energy policy would see "drastic cuts in federal spending on energy research and development and for the outright elimination of subsidies and tax breaks for wind, solar power, and other alternative energy technologies." (Welcome back to the Dark Ages America.) Ryan won't answer whether he'll also cut subsidies to the traditional oil and gas industry, some of whom, like the Koch brothers, to no surprise, are huge campaign contributors.

Let's get to know the infamous Mr. Muller a bit more. As a former climate change "denier", he decided that he'd better be able to back up his claims with actual evidence that human activity was not causing whatever (small) changes in temperature were taking place. When he and others did the work, they first tracked real changes over the last 250 years and tried to blame those changes on many other non-human factors, but they couldn't. So Muller, a scientist, changed his mind based on science. Ryan, a non-scientist, will not change his mind, based on non-science. You can absolutely count on it. And Romney change his mind? Based on past... oh, surely not.

Another important person to mention is Anthony Leiserowitz. Leiserowitz heads the Yale Project on Climate Change, a project devoted to monitoring the public's knowledge on climate change. The other day, the group reported a poll which says by and large, voters approve candidates taking a pro-climate stance. He said that being pro-climate is not regarded as being negative, even among Republicans. That won't matter to Ryan, and when he gets into a debate (you can absolutely count on this too), what he says about this topic will count against him in the ranks of the independents. But, of course, Mr. Ryan already knows everything he needs to know on the subject.

Now why do I say Ryan is my "Clean Energy Buddy"? Let's go back to Muller. He might not sign on to everything that NASA's James Hansen has to say but according to Muller's own report, his "findings are stronger than those of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change" and he "expects the rate of warming to proceed at a steady pace, about one and half degrees over land in the next 50 years" unless China continues its rapid economic growth, bumping that up to 20 years. I've been saying for years that the build-up of greenhouse gas emissions (GHGs) is unstoppable by anything any of our politicians are going to do. Climate change is going to happen on a grand scale. Nice to have Dr. Muller on board.

So there are two possible outcomes: Ryan might help the Democrats win, and while President Obama won't start down the road of an effective carbon tax (nobody can), he is at least listening, and might well want to improve funding for alternative energy. He knows the Chinese see the industrial opportunity staring them in the face when it comes to developing and manufacturing the most advanced answers to minimize carbon emissions, so that's good.

If Romney and Ryan win, the big difference will be that they are personally incapable of changing their minds and recognizing reality. That means four years worth of further (and more powerful) evidence of global warming advancement through increased temperatures, continued drought, harsher storms, growing forest fires, flooding, and so on. They'll invent excuses, but government support for alternatives will be stopped in its tracks, maybe under the umbrella of maintaining tax cuts for the wealthy -- the wealthy, who by the way, probably figure they can just spend more and remain unaffected by the chaos around them. Some of this will hit people in their pocketbooks (e.g. food prices) but for four years the U.S. Government will ignore all of this. They'll also ignore Chinese technological progress.

While the Koch brothers might not like it, the industry will be watching and they too will know that the U.S. will eventually have to react. And if Dr. Muller is right: that reaction will be immense. This is when investors like me and my colleagues at Chrysalix who choose to fund groundbreaking and effective clean energy technology innovations will be presented with big cheques. So Paul Ryan, thank you very much for being my "buddy!

Mike Brown is Chairman of Chrysalix Energy Venture Capital, 40-year venture veteran, and winner of the Cleantech Group's "Pioneer Award"

 
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By now everyone knows that Mitt Romney's new friend, Paul Ryan, is a fiscal conservative. We also know he's a climate denier so the environmental community is going nuts... but I think they are out of...
By now everyone knows that Mitt Romney's new friend, Paul Ryan, is a fiscal conservative. We also know he's a climate denier so the environmental community is going nuts... but I think they are out of...
 
 
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10:49 PM on 08/25/2012
Sorry, Mr. Brown, I think you are naively optimistic. Your hope for "reverse psychology" to work on the Republican policy makers four years on when the s**t has hit the fan is pollyana-ish. And as for public opinion, well, the fact that the Republicans are even in the running to regain the presidency after what GWB and his pals did between 2000 and 2008 proves Americans are dumber than dirt. (And I can say that because I am an American -- who did not vote for McCain, or GWB, or GHWB, or Reagan, or Nixon.)
03:13 PM on 08/24/2012
Since the US is now attracting investment capital from some of the EU countries that have tied their own hands behind their backs with bans on shale oil and gas developments,(France &Germany) shutting down nuclear plants(Germany) , it would seem that the US's emphasis on natural gas fired power plants is paying off. The EU is going to pay a high price for electricity,for the forseeable future, at the expense of their consumers and industry. The EU is being highly impractical, at a time when they need solutions more than ever.
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silverwolf13
I know that I do not know.
06:46 PM on 08/24/2012
And what happens when communities cut off fracking because of the pollution of their drinking water? Or even just when the price rises because of demand?
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aligatorhardt
Cut on the bias
08:27 AM on 08/27/2012
Wind and solar power has already reduced utility spot prices in Germany by 20%. Saving money is in everyone's interest. Merit order effect of PV in Germany - News - Renewables International

Solar 15% Returns Lure Investments From Google to Buffett - Bloomberg
04:35 PM on 08/27/2012
Yes, Wind and Solar are so cost effective that hundreds of Solar energy manufacturers have already gone bankrupt in Germany, and elsewhere. Those Western manufacturers who are still in business are closing plants and reducing staff.( ie Vestas for example)    Even with vast subsidies, these companies are not profitable.  Germany is now building 23 coal fired electricity plants. Its not working .  Low co2 emissions anyone ?
08:18 AM on 08/24/2012
Mr. Brown should read more than one article on Richard Muller before he devotes an entire article to him. Muller has never been a skeptic on global warming. Never. He has been known to be critical of the work of other climate scientists and he did call for the resignation of the head of the IPCC. Part of his research is funded by the Koch Foundation. But he was never a skeptic. I guess that fact makes the entire article worthless. This video from 2010 reveals Muller's views on both global warming and the Chinese.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VbR0EPWgkEI&feature=player_embedded#t=1801s

The issue of climate change has really taken a beating if I can believe Mr. Brown's comments. Vote for Obama because he will do nothing on climate change (after all he can't) but Romney will slash spending to renewable energy projects such as the ones Brown seeks financing to fund.
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Richard Bartholomew
My micro-bio isn't empty.
04:48 AM on 08/24/2012
'I'm an investor in "clean" energy, as in anything that works to provide energy (or use energy) that reduces the impact of too much carbon.'

Nuclear electric power generation works to provide energy and reduces the impact of too much carbon. Are you an investor in nuclear electric power generation, Mr Brown?
05:29 AM on 08/24/2012
Ricky how is that relevant to the argument. Nuclear is dangerous at the tail end of the use of uranium since there is no way to dispense with the spent fuel rods. What I do is use a great deal less energy for what ever I do. I insulated my attic to R60 last year. That was about double what I had. My heating bill is half what it was. I walk and that makes my doctor happy. I eat local a lot of the time (it is a new real market where I live) and I don't use plastic bags or pop cans or bottled water. I keep on wearing the same old clothes for up to twenty years. I donate what I don't need and all of my appliances are efficient but I am even more efficient than they are. The high costs of fossil fuels (war, health problems and soil pollution plus global warming) means I maintain my standard of living while using much less. Nuclear is for the fifties. What is needed is green cities, wind and solar and the horible thought that you really aren't happier with ninety five percent of what ou own.
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Richard Bartholomew
My micro-bio isn't empty.
10:33 AM on 08/24/2012
Whether or not electric power generation from nuclear fuel is dangerous or 'for the fifties' is not relevant to the issue of whether of not said mode of power generation reduces the impact of too much carbon. The author didn't assert that he's an investor in things that reduce the impact of too much carbon---except those that are dangerous and 'for the fifties'.

All of the conservation measure you mention are certainly well worth pursuing, nor do I have anything against extracting energy from wind or solar radiation. Also, beyond a keyboard and Internet connection, you have no idea what I do or don't own. Thus you can only reasonably assert that I'm not happier with zero, fifty,or one-hundered percent of what I own.

As for nuclear electric power generation for the fifties, check out the miniture nuclear reactors currently being built by the folks at Gen4 Energy, Inc. (formerly Hyperion) are doing right now: http://www.gen4energy.com/ .
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aligatorhardt
Cut on the bias
08:31 AM on 08/27/2012
Nuclear power will not reverse global warming, and it is not safe, not clean, and not economical with out subsides.  The only technology that requires an emergency evacuation plan « Energy Vox

Power bills skyrocket with nuclear power
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Richard Bartholomew
My micro-bio isn't empty.
06:21 AM on 08/28/2012
Once again, the only issue here is whether or not the power generation method reduces the impact of too much carbon. Safety, cleanliness, subsidies, or any other issue were not under discussion.