Russell Moore: Let's Get Off the Grid

Russell J. Moore, GoLocalProv MINDSETTER™

Russell Moore: Let's Get Off the Grid

With the right green energy program, RI could lead the way in protecting the planet, create jobs, and improve the economy, believes Russell Moore.
One of the more encouraging aspects of Governor Lincoln Chafee's State of the State last week was his acknowledgement of the need to address our energy woes.

"New England is facing serious challenges in the energy sector. The first is cost - we have some of the highest in the country because we are at the end of the pipeline. The second is climate change," Chafee said.

Rhode Islanders have this proclivity to blame all of the state's economic woes on our penchant for over-taxing and over-regulating the private sector. Like any simple explanation for complex problems, this analysis misses the mark. And although we do tax and spend way too much, it's undeniable that our expensive energy costs are a massive and often unnoticed hindrance to economic growth in The Ocean State.

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When we think of Texas' booming economy, its not enough to attribute their success to their low tax and cost structure. Companies in Texas also benefit tremendously from inexpensive energy and move their operations where everything's bigger and the energy's cheaper.

Ignore the ostriches

We're not going to match our rivals like Texas overnight, but with some smart investments today, we'll reap huge dividends tomorrow.

And despite the rhetoric of the ostrich-like science deniers, temperatures and sea levels are rising, and it's due in large part to human activity--mainly through the burning of fossil fuels. There will be consequences if we're not proactive and they're not pretty.

It's high time to reduce our dependence on the electric grid by diversifying our sources of electricity.

Electric Grid: outdated, ineffective, unsafe

There are serious problems with the electric grid. The electric grid is antiquated, ineffective, and unsafe. It's an outdated concept similar to how we used to network computer decades ago.

In the early days, we used mainframes that connected our computers to a massive computer. When the mainframe went down, so did our computers. In other words, we've gone from a centralized model to a distributed model, when it comes to personal computing.

For some reason, we still rely on this centralized model for the one thing we need the most - electricity. Businesses and houses are connected to the 100-year-old grid by telephone poles. When a pole goes down, all the houses and businesses on a street lose power. When the actual grid experiences trouble, so everything else goes to hell in a hand basket.

It's astonishing to think about the progress we've made with computers, but so little progress has come to the way we create and distribute energy. It's not only ancient, inconvenient, and ineffective--it's also dangerous. A terrorist plot against the grid is, in all likelihood, one of the biggest threats we face on a national security level.

Incentivize

Which is why we should do everything possible to diversify our energy supply and become less reliant on the antiquated electric grid. Deepwater wind, the project that will locate wind turbines off of the Rhode Island coastline and will be energy produces for generations to come, is a nice start. But it's not enough and we need to do more.

The state has a legitimate place to create incentives for companies to produce all kinds of green and clean energy. The state needs to include incentives such as tax credits, seed funding, and tax breaks for companies that create ways to get us off our dependence on foreign fossil fuels as well as the energy grid.

Yes, it will cost the state government money up front, but like any smart investment, it will pay serious dividends in the future.

Fuel Cells

A perfect example of an innovation that the state could incentivize would be fuel cells. Fuel cells convert either hydrogen or natural gas to electricity, without actually combusting the gas (burning them). Companies like Ballard Power or Proton Power Systems specialize in creating hydrogen fuel cells, whereas Bloom energy and Fuel Cell Energy (which is not the most creative name), specialize in converting natural gas to clean energy.

Fuel cell businesses create highly efficient, green, mini clean energy power plants. These fuel cells, which are relatively small – sometimes not much larger than a refrigerator – create a stationary power grid and are completely clean energy. Additionally, they emit very low amounts of carbon, and no other harmful chemicals.

Green and mean

Imagine a car running on gasoline which doesn't emit any harmful climate changing pollutants. Imagine living next to a power plant that's quiet, and doesn't create any nasty smoke. That's precisely what these companies are creating.

Instead of building a loud, nasty power plant in the middle of nowhere that you connect to, this type of energy gives the power directly to the customer. It's onsite, reliable, clean, personalized energy for the business.

What's most attractive about this particular form of green energy is the fact that it is continuous and not subject to the whims of the weather. While solar and wind power are certainly attractive forms of green energy, let's face it, when the sun isn't shining, and the wind isn't blowing, they're not creating energy.

These generators create clean energy that allows hospitals, schools, and wastewater treatment facilities to operate when the next Hurricane Sandy or Irene wreaks havoc. Yes, diesel generators also do the job, but they're not designed to run more than two days and they're harmful to the environment.

Job creators

This create jobs because people will be hired to install the boxes and run the gas lines--no different than wind and solar from a jobs perspective.

This also supports the domestic energy agenda. America is fast becoming the world's leading natural gas provider. Google, Apple, Coca Cola, Walmart, Staples, JP Morgan Chase, a long list of fortune 500 companies are using this form of energy.

All of the above

As Chafee hinted in his speech, the time has long past come for Rhode Island to lead the way on clean, green energy. The state needs to take an "all of the above" approach. There's no reason the state shouldn't create subsidies for wind, solar, hydropower, and fuel cells. With the right program, we could lead the way in protecting the planet, create jobs, and improve our economy.

It will be interesting, in the upcoming months, to hear what plans, if any, that the candidates for governor have to capitalize on our green energy opportunities. A failure to do so would be one of our greatest sins of omission to date.

 

A native Rhode Islander, Russell J. Moore is a graduate of Providence College and St. Raphael Academy. He worked as a news reporter for 7 years (2004-2010), 5 of which with The Warwick Beacon, focusing on government. He continues to keep a close eye on the inner workings of Rhode Islands state and local governments.

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