Biden Wants To Make Federal Government Carbon Neutral by 2050 106
The Biden administration announced Wednesday it aims to buy its way to a cleaner, cooler planet, spending billions to create a federal fleet of electric vehicles, upgrade federal buildings and change how the government buys electricity. From a report: The executive order President Biden signed leverages Washington's buying power to cut the government's carbon emissions 65 percent by the end of the decade. It lays out goals that would put the federal government on a path to net-zero emissions by 2050 and would add at least 10 gigawatts' worth of clean electricity to the grid.
Under the new approach, federal operations would run entirely on carbon-free electricity by 2030. By 2035, the government would stop buying gas-powered vehicles, switching to zero-emission heavy-duty trucks and cars. A decade after that, most of the buildings owned or leased by the government would no longer contribute to the carbon pollution that's warming the planet. The order also instructs the government to launch a "buy clean" initiative, prioritizing products produced and transported with low greenhouse gas emissions. Sarah Bloom Raskin, a Duke University law professor who served as treasury deputy secretary under President Barack Obama, said in a recent interview that the administration's push to reduce its carbon footprint could ripple across the economy.
Under the new approach, federal operations would run entirely on carbon-free electricity by 2030. By 2035, the government would stop buying gas-powered vehicles, switching to zero-emission heavy-duty trucks and cars. A decade after that, most of the buildings owned or leased by the government would no longer contribute to the carbon pollution that's warming the planet. The order also instructs the government to launch a "buy clean" initiative, prioritizing products produced and transported with low greenhouse gas emissions. Sarah Bloom Raskin, a Duke University law professor who served as treasury deputy secretary under President Barack Obama, said in a recent interview that the administration's push to reduce its carbon footprint could ripple across the economy.
After he's dead? (Score:1, Troll)
Re:After he's dead? (Score:5, Interesting)
It is generally a fair notion to express. A lot of politicians have taken the easy move of declaring a far-off goal long after their term is over, and is often light on action toward that goal in their term. So we shouldn't be talking about 'X will be done by 2050' and more about "y is what is being done right now, in the hopes that maybe X will happen by 2050".
Allowing politicians to focus on an abstract goal at a far off year opens up the possibility of them doing hollow pandering during their term, and laying the blame at failing to achieve their goals at their successors.
Biden's plan may be of significant substance, but the headline of 'by 2050' makes me immediately skeptical going into the story.
Re:After he's dead? (Score:5, Informative)
It is generally a fair notion to express. A lot of politicians have taken the easy move of declaring a far-off goal long after their term is over, and is often light on action toward that goal in their term. So we shouldn't be talking about 'X will be done by 2050' and more about "y is what is being done right now, in the hopes that maybe X will happen by 2050".
Allowing politicians to focus on an abstract goal at a far off year opens up the possibility of them doing hollow pandering during their term, and laying the blame at failing to achieve their goals at their successors.
Biden's plan may be of significant substance, but the headline of 'by 2050' makes me immediately skeptical going into the story.
From the summary:
Under the new approach, federal operations would run entirely on carbon-free electricity by 2030. By 2035, the government would stop buying gas-powered vehicles, switching to zero-emission heavy-duty trucks and cars.
2030 is near enough that you'd need to start taking actions to start making it happen now (and Biden has a good shot at reaching 2030 himself).
Realistically I think that's a good way to go about it. Set a long term ambitious goal but then also set a short term goal that builds towards the longer goal.
Re: (Score:2)
> By 2035, the government would stop buying gas-powered vehicles
So they'll continue buying gas powered vehicles for another 14 years?
> Set a long term ambitious goal but then also set a short term goal that builds towards the longer goal.
If Biden's term ends in 2024, what targets do they have that he himself can action? If they're target is carbon free electricity by 2030, is it 50% carbon free by 2024?
Biden has made same claims on hard numbers / milestones but failed to follow through in the past:
ht [wsj.com]
Re: After he's dead? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Prohibit them from spending money of fuel
I agree. Let's start with no fuel for Air Force One. Then Air Force Two. Then the Speaker of the House. Then the Senate Pro Tem. Just start from POTUS and work the way down the line of succession on cutting them off from burning any fuel. Let's see how well that goes.
The US Navy has been begging for years to develop a carbon neural jet fuel. If Biden and friends wants to get government CO2 emissions to neutral then take that technology and scale it up. They proved the technology worked a long time a
Re: (Score:2)
Oh, that's right, they are still cleaning up the mess from the Manhattan project, losing track of where they left their plutonium, giving money to solar and EV companies so that they can produce nothing and declare bankruptcy to leave the government with the debt, and dumping money into an international fusion reactor that won't produce energy for 30 years.
And funding research into fission too. Maybe you missed the funding into research into small fission reactors during the last Obama administration when Biden was VP, but it happened. The ones you say they should fund work on - they did that.
Re: (Score:2)
And funding research into fission too. Maybe you missed the funding into research into small fission reactors during the last Obama administration when Biden was VP, but it happened. The ones you say they should fund work on - they did that.
While the DOE was funding research into nuclear power plants the DOD was building them. Which effort produced more energy for the least CO2 emitted? That's right, building nuclear power plants.
The DOE has been worthless in lowering CO2 emissions since it was created. We've seen lower CO2 emissions in spite of their efforts, not because of them. While the DOE was funding research into fission and fusion we saw private industry close coal power plants and replace them with natural gas. lowering CO2 emissi
Re: (Score:2)
The Department of Energy doesn't want to solve our energy problems. If we didn't have an energy crisis then the reason for the existence of the DOE evaporates. Their jobs depend on an energy shortage, so they will work to maintain an energy shortage. If the federal government was serious about solving our energy problems then they'd abolish the DOE.
Link to evidence required. Invective is not evidence.
Re: (Score:2)
I see no requirement to prove the DOE is not doing their job when you provided no evidence that the DOE did do their job.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Then why don't you simply ignore me?
Re: (Score:2)
STFU. EXXON has spiked gas prices. Along with the rest of the oil companies. The media all says how the President of the US doesn't control those prices... when the GOP's in power.
The futures traders made a mint. Aren't you happy for them? Aren't you mad that Biden, unlike the Former Guy, released some of the oil reserves, and prices dropped $0.20/gal in a week?
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
The lowest CO2 energy source available to us today is nuclear fission. What is Biden doing to keep existing nuclear power plants open? And build more? Not much from what I've seen.
Which energy sources are the lowest CO producers?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Which energy sources cost the least?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Which energy sources give the highest return on energy invested?
https://world-nuclear.org/info... [world-nuclear.org]
Which energy sources are the safest?
https://www.nextbigfuture.com/... [nextbigfuture.com]
It seems the
Re: (Score:2)
Your first link goes to a table with 2014 data on it. The second one shows LCOE of new nuclear, utility scale solar and offshore wind as being all over the place. I've previously dissected a LCOE white paper on slashdot, pointing out the massive holes in the paper, like handwaving away all awkward costs.
Your third link is just f-ing absurd. "Which energy sources give the highest return on energy invested?" And it links to a nuclear lobbyist site. Who cares how much energy, it's the cost and the emissio
Re: (Score:2)
Your first link goes to a table with 2014 data on it.
I'd be pleased to have more recent data presented to me, care to offer any? Oh, wait, if you only scrolled down that page you'd find data from 2020. Sooo, You're welcome?
The second one shows LCOE of new nuclear, utility scale solar and offshore wind as being all over the place.
Yes, "all over the place" but trends can be seen by, you know, looking at the numbers.
I've previously dissected a LCOE white paper on slashdot, pointing out the massive holes in the paper, like handwaving away all awkward costs.
That's nice. Sure would be nice if you could have provided a link to it.
Your third link is just f-ing absurd. "Which energy sources give the highest return on energy invested?" And it links to a nuclear lobbyist site.
If you believe the data is cherry picked, incorrect, or somehow misleading then you can link to another source. You are just shooting the bearer of bad news.
Who cares how much energy, it's the cost and the emissions that matter in this context. If it cost 1/100th the cost of nuclear, emitted no carbon or harmful toxins but required more overall energy to run, would you really choose nuclear over renewables? Well, yes, you would, but would anyone who wasn't a nuclear lobbyist?
I covered the costs and
Re: (Score:2)
Yawn. I didn't hurl insults at you, I pointed out that all your arguments supporting nuclear power are absurdly flawed. Examples of this are tables showing LCOE being, like, somewhere between a really low number and a really high number, or using absurd arguments like highest return on energy invested.
Nuclear is massively subsidised, and it's failed, utterly, to be commercially viable. Apart from the absurd levels of danger and the unresolved problems around waste, a much newer technology, PV, and a much
Re: (Score:2)
Every blood time.
Maybe Biden has a grasp of basic economics and can see that nuclear has failed, so is concentrating on more practical measures.
Re: (Score:2)
So the idea he is this master economists is laughable.
The more likely reason is his 'advisors' (those actually running/ruining the country) are leftest wingnuts who hate "nukes". That or there is no kickbacks in it for the Biden family (after all Chyna is a major mfg'er of 'green' energy products).
E
Re: (Score:2)
Oof, someone needs to get out of the right-wing propaganda bubble a bit, maybe watch some non-doctored videos of the president talking
The parent said Biden has a grasp of basic economics, not that he's a master economist. That's all you need to see the costs of a new nuclear plant (plus the political backlash) make it non-viable these days.
Re: (Score:2)
Really is telling that you assume I am a R and not a sane democrat. Shows more about your politics than mine as I did not leave the Democrat Party the donkeys ass left me.
Re: (Score:2)
Even if you're not a registered republican, you're consuming right-wing media to the point you're detached from reality. Just presenting a list of GOP talking points
- "Biden is old and senile, he can't even talk in full sentences". - He's pretty old no doubt, I wish we could have leaders under retirement age, but he's clearly still mentally well. Here's a press conference from a couple months ago (without cuts) where he's coherent and using full sentences https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
- "People that do
Re: (Score:2)
As for the rest. Piss off. I am old. I remember when the D did not stand for controlling dickhead. I remember when it stood for freedom. Be it thought. Speech. Color of ones skin. These days, not so much.
Re: (Score:2)
Biden's always had a bit of a stutter, nothing to worry about there.
Old people usually do go to the conservative side. These days people are more interested in fixing problems like healthcare, wealth inequality, and education
Re: (Score:2)
The lowest CO2 energy source available to us today is nuclear fission. What is Biden doing to keep existing nuclear power plants open? And build more? Not much from what I've seen.
Which energy sources are the lowest CO producers? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
The figures for 2020 on that page (and the report at https://unece.org/sed/document... [unece.org] has ones for more than just the EU if you read the source) are different from other figures, e.g. https://www.ipcc.ch/site/asset... [www.ipcc.ch] (page 29) which has analyses from two different organisations, which put nuclear slightly higher than wind in terms of gCO2/kWh. That IPCC is from 2018, so slightly older.
Looking at your link for costs for new - onshore wind comes out as cheapest, followed by utility scale solar, then nucle
Re: (Score:2)
If you look at Lazard 2020 (sometimes considered to be the benchmark figure), offshore wind is already much cheaper than nuclear at about half the cost, with nuclear being one of the most expensive options. Is this the message you want us to take away from your links?
If offshore wind is lower cost than nuclear power then that's great, if you have a place offshore for those windmills. There will be nations/regions/states that don't have a place for offshore windmills. What I want people to take away is that nuclear power must be part of nearly every nation's energy supply. They will have to rely on nuclear power because it offers some mix of lower cost, lower CO2 emissions, greater safety, lower demands for land/labor/material/whatever, or quite possibly all the above
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You not liking my answer is not the same as not giving you one. I addressed your points, you don't like what that means for your argument, so you pretend I avoided the question.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I addressed your points
You did not.
Re: (Score:2)
The discussion was about a particular set of links you posted with claims. I showed your claims were incorrect.
Really? What claims did I make? You can go back and look just as well as I can. https://slashdot.org/comments.... [slashdot.org]
Ending the purchases of gasoline vehicles is not going to help. Solar power projects are a waste of limited resources. This is not an energy plan. It's wishful thinking that is counter to all the data we have available. We need onshore wind, hydro, geothermal, nuclear fission. synthesized fuels and energy storage. Not batteries for grid scale storage, something cheaper and easier. We need thermal energy storage.
How does the data you linked to invalidate that claim?
Re: (Score:2)
Really? What claims did I make? You can go back and look just as well as I can.
That nuclear power has the best EROEI and lowest gCO2/kWh. If you can't remember that then you need help.
Ending the purchases of gasoline vehicles is not going to help. Solar power projects are a waste of limited resources. This is not an energy plan. It's wishful thinking that is counter to all the data we have available. We need onshore wind, hydro, geothermal, nuclear fission. synthesized fuels and energy storage. Not batteries for grid scale storage, something cheaper and easier. We need thermal energy storage.
How does the data you linked to invalidate that claim?
Goalpost shifting again.
Re: (Score:3)
2030 is the declared end of sales for fossil fuel vehicles (except hybrids, those are 2035) in the UK. Many European countries are looking at similar deadlines.
So it's not really a very aggressive goal, the government should have no trouble meeting it as car manufacturers are going to have to step to keep selling in Europe.
Am I right in thinking that the federal government couldn't ban fossil fuel vehicle sales? Seems that such things are under control of the states, so perhaps this is the best he can do.
Re: (Score:2)
2030 is the declared end of sales for fossil fuel vehicles (except hybrids, those are 2035) in the UK. Many European countries are looking at similar deadlines.
New ones, you can still buy used ones.
Re: (Score:2)
A lot of politicians have taken the easy move of declaring a far-off goal long after their term is over, and is often light on action toward that goal in their term.
It's easy to write this off, but the reality is there's no meaningful goals which can be delivered in the short term other than provide funding for initiatives that will bear fruit after you leave.
So we shouldn't be talking about 'X will be done by 2050' and more about "y is what is being done right now, in the hopes that maybe X will happen by 2050".
They do, it just doesn't make the news because the word "carbon neutral" is missing from the transcript. If I tell people I plan to lose 25kg in the next 6 months, it's a comment which sparks meaningful discussion. If I tell people I'm going to consume 100 less calories today they shrug and change the subject.
Now
Re: (Score:1)
Re: After he's dead? (Score:1)
Yeah, imagine a political leader that thinks beyond his own life and ambitions.
I tried and came up with nothing.
Re: (Score:1)
Fuck you're a knob.
When I plant a tree, it's with the expectation that it will outlive me.
But you had to Godwin.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
These days, I don't think Biden can think much beyond breakfast.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Problem is that even if he tries to set things up so that it carries on after he's dead, the Re-trump-licans (or juts plain Republicans, if he's dead, too.) will just undo all his legislation when they get back into power.
Humanity is just plain and simply boned at this point. Take a lot of others with us but life will find a way and evolve up a new diversity.
We are not "boned" (Re:After he's dead?) (Score:2)
Humanity isn't "boned", we solved the problem of global warming already. Didn't you get the memo that solar power is cheaper than coal? That we installed record numbers of solar power yet again? We are doing so great on solar power than we don't need nuclear power any more. We will just close all those nuclear power plants and put solar panels in their place.
That's not exactly true though. Solar power will not save us. We will need more nuclear power plants. We still solved the problem of global warm
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Once we stop increasing the concentration of greenhouse in the atmosphere, the warming will finish something like 25-50 years after that. But sea level rise will continue for centuries.
Re: (Score:1)
No, but I possibly will, and I'll personally enforce it!
Does this include the military? (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
I doubt it, because war is very environmentally unfriendly ... then again, fewer wars would do us (and the world!) a lot of good.
A case could be made that a great big war that killed off a bunch of us would do the world more good.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Biological, if properly targeted at humans only, can have little negative consequences on environment overall. Nuclear hitting largest population centers (not much nature there) is also pretty efficient at significantly reducing human population without causing much impact on environment. Big population centers would probably be targeted first in a big shootout anyway. There have been a lot of improvements in nuclear weapon yields vs radiation left afterwards in the last 50 years or so. From wikipedia artic
Re: (Score:2)
There's going to be people that can make the case China already started biological warfare. I'm not saying that's the case, only that there's evidence for a case to be made. Evidence like more people dead from COVID-19 in 2021 than in 2020. https://news.yahoo.com/2021-us... [yahoo.com]
There's a case to be made that China is waging chemical warfare on the USA by shipping in tainted recreational drugs. China has been waging economic warfare for a long time as well.
China isn't the only nation that declared war on the U
Re: (Score:2)
COVID only got going in the US in earnest in March-April 2020, whereas it's had all of 2021 to do its thing. This isn't evidence of biological warfare.
Also, assuming COVID is a bioweapon, who says that the Chinese released it? That would have been a hell of an "own goal."
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
And Keith Richards...
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
That's silly, the main drivers of deficit spending are the social programs and the moronic tax cuts. DoD's latest budget is roughly $750 Billion, the last deficit for 2020 was $984 Billion. The entire size of the U.S. economy is north of $21 Trillion.
Re:Does this include the military? (Score:5, Insightful)
Trump resolved that by making us energy independent and a net exporter. Biden's day one policies reversed that. Not to mention Biden's plea to OPEC to produce more oil to counter the rising costs from his policies.
Re: (Score:1)
Trumps energy independence had nothing to do with weening off oil. The discussion shouldn't even be based around net import or export or oil security, that's a distraction from the real issue at hand. You also can't make something out of nothing. If you want to transition away from oil you have two options: Use the proceeds from your dirty industry, or tax the ever living fuck out of your constituents. Only one option is viable in America where everyone lives with the fantasy that shit just magically happen
Re: (Score:2)
Trump resolved that by making us energy independent and a net exporter.
This is not accurate. Both the George W. Bush and Obama administrations took specific policy steps to do that. Those efforts had their results during the Trump administration. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_energy_independence [wikipedia.org]. If you look at here https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/us-energy-facts/imports-and-exports.php [eia.gov], you can see that the relevant trend lines of decreasing imports and increasing exports start around 2004 and slowly creep up. Trump did very little which had any impac
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Oil and coal are carbon that's been locked away from the atmosphere for hundreds of megayears and is being released now.
Trees? Carbon locked away for a century, maybe, tops. Mostly for a couple-three decades. So a tree represents carbon taken out of the atmosphere when we were kids, and returned to the atmosphere now.
Re: (Score:2)
Is he Democrat? (Does this include the military?) (Score:2)
If Biden wanted the US military to produce less CO2 then he had ample opportunity to make that happen when he was a senator, and again as VP. He didn't, so I'm not convinced Biden gives a damn about carbon emissions.
The US Navy wanted nuclear powered ships, not because they produce less CO2 but because they offer other advantages. Biden and his fellow Democrats have been voting against nuclear powered ships in the Navy for decades. For years the US Navy wanted money to develop a carbon neutral jet fuel b
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Naval ships have used nuclear reactors successfully for 70+ years.
Which makes Democrat refusal to fund more Navy nuclear powered ships an even bigger mistake.
The Army and Air Farce have a more dismal record with the technology. See also: SL-1 (the one-rod wonder reactor that made Chernobyl seem like a paragon of good engineering practice), Fort Greely, and Project Pluto.
Those are events that happened in the 1950s and 1960s, not exactly representative of how things are run today. I'm sure the US Navy would be nice enough to train some of their fellow defenders of the nation on how to do nuclear power safely if for some reason there's any question on their skills.
2050? (Score:4, Interesting)
2030 would have been an aggressive target which would have required the government to take some action. 2050 says that someone will do it later.
Imagine if JFK aimed for 1990? We would have never made it to the moon.
The main issue is that no one wants to admit what is needed to be sustainable. We would need to reverse a culture of consumption.
The only time that we made real improvements was during the 2008 housing drop. People stopped buying stuff. Our current culture requires planned obsolescence. It has been that way since 1950. I think such a change in direction starting in the US is unlikely.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
2030 would have been an aggressive target which would have required the government to take some action. 2050 says that someone will do it later.
2030 is would have been an aggressive target that would be impossible to reach in any sustainable way and would involve trashing a lot of existing equipment and practices. 2050 says we can do it in a way that embeds practices in the long term rather than yet another short term change that will be undone the next time the manager quits and is replaced and benefit from a replacement strategy rather than a dump and change (which itself is also not a very good practice).
The main issue is that no one wants to admit what is needed to be sustainable.
You're not seeing the forest through the
Re: (Score:2)
Paris Agreement (Score:1)
The entire world has agreed to reach net zero for the entire globe by 2050 in the Paris Agreement, including the US.
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
The Paris Agreement is a worthless piece of paper. It was designed specifically to not be a binding treaty as Obama had no means to secure ratification of such in the Senate. It also has no teeth for any other country. Oddly enough, the US under Trump was the furthest along in reaching the goals specified. Largely due to a shift of electric generation from coal to natural gas from fracking. Something which Biden and the Democrats want to end.
Re: (Score:2)
Except that the Paris climate agreement has no real enforcement mechanism, and other countries like China and India seem to be ignoring it completely by building new coal plants to produce electricity. It's greenwashing at its finest... all hype and little action.
I want a pony by 2022. (Score:5, Funny)
and I'll troll slashdot if I don't get one.
Re: (Score:2)
Specific? Yes.
Measurable? Yes.
Attainable? Yes.
Relevant? No.
Time Oriented? Yes.
Almost. You get a gold star for effort.
Re: (Score:2)
Relevant? No.
Err this is news for nerds. Ponies have always been relevant https://slashdot.org/story/06/... [slashdot.org]
Re: (Score:1)
Screenshot of the famous OMG Ponies skin [flickr.com]
Re: (Score:2)
I sit corrected.
Re: (Score:3)
To be fair, you're going to troll slashdot if you do get a pony.
"Do it or do not do it, you will regret both." - Soren Kierkegaard
Re: (Score:1)
That's it, you're off the negotiation team.
Include outsourced materials? (Score:2)
Does it including all the CO2 produced during the manufacturing of the goods and materials, not just electricity and gas, bought by the Feds? I.e. not just "prioritizing" buying "clean" goods, but also include the CO2 produced in their total. E.g. would they count the CO2 used to produce all the steel and aluminum used in their tanks and planes?
If not, it is simply outsourcing the CO2 production to somewhere else, then pretend they are carbon neutral.
Typical political BS (Score:2)
You see this with pensions too. By the time the heavy lifting has to be done or bill comes due they are long gone.
Like there will be a choice. (Score:2)
Lots of pundits are predicting that by 2030 all the major car manufacturers will only be selling EVs.
Pretty easy to switch if the old way doesn't exist anymore.
Carbon neutral? Is this a joke? (Score:1)
https://www.nap.edu/catalog/13... [nap.edu]
https://www.theguardian.com/co... [theguardian.com]
https://www.epa.gov/newsreleas... [epa.gov]
https://features.propublica.or... [propublica.org]
That's like 10 seconds of searching. The federal government is literally above the law, and has pollution issues which would drive any other organization into bankruptcy, then, in the best case, uses taxpayer money to clean it up. In the worst case, it simply retains ownership so that it never has to clean it up.
I get that this proposal is along some narrow lines, but this is
Park the Beast (Score:2)
Long Term Planning in the Age of Trump. (Score:2)
I'm not sure how this is ever going to really work. Unlike some things, where's there's a broad consensus, with arguments over methodology, there's a large proportion of the law-makers and electorate that simply believe climate change is either A) a hoax, b) Unimportant enough that their profits are a bigger priority or C) Not their problem as they'll all be dead/in heaven (and anyway, their religion says the world is theirs to use and abuse as they please). The odds are that sometime in the next 30 years,
"buying" power? (Score:2)
https://www.thebalance.com/u-s... [thebalance.com]
The new budget is $6 trillion.
It exceeds estimated (generously calculated) revenues by $1.8 trillion. Let's call it $2 trn.
Oh, and "Most of these revenues come from taxes and earnings from quantitative easing."...that means the government PRINTING money to pay its bills.
Even the dumb-as-grass Keynesians should see the inflationary effects of that.
Our federal debt is already $29 trillion.
Pray, tell me where we're going to get the funds to "buy" our way to carbon-neutrality?
W
Re: (Score:2)
I get a good laugh every time a corporation or government entity claims they're going with 100% renewable electricity. All they're doing is claiming their allocation from renewable resources. It doesn't change the mix on the grid. They're just choosing to pay a little bit more to make the claim and virtue signal. It might get to the point where they need to outbid each other if enough customers want the privilege of the claim and the mix on the grid isn't sufficient.