To: wall-list@igc.topica.com
To Whom It May Concern,
I find the Open Letter to Bush by 250 Energy Scientists to be horrendously weak in the strength of its disaffection with nuclear power (the relevant section quoted immediately below; the entire document appears below that).
We are facing a Nuclear Mafia, and such lackluster opposition will not change things. If these scientists are not willing to thoroughly denounce something so utterly opposite to that which they want (a clean environment), they will never break the back of the powers-that-be and get a fair shake for the renewable alternatives.
If these scientists wish to learn more about why they should speak out more strongly, I recommend they spend some time visiting sites like www.ratical.org where Dr. John Gofman's work is presented (as well as many others), or www.mothersalert.org where Dr. Stanley Thompson's comments appear (with many others), or they can visit Jack Shannon's site about the Kesselring Atomic Power Laboratory: http://www.mindspring.com/~kapl/index.html . Also, Scott D. Portzline's http://www.tmia.com/ is another good one to check out. And Nuclear Information and Resource Service & World Information Service on Energy (NIRS/WISE): www.nirs.org . Or visit Standing for Truth About Radiation: http://www.noradiation.org/ .
There are hundreds of such web sites, where a far stronger anti-nuclear environmental message is being delivered by knowledgeable people. There is no need for such weak words as those contained in this Energy Letter, in view of the magnitude of the horror we are facing. There are hundreds of books to read, too -- this is not an issue any citizen needs to remain ignorant about, and it is not one any citizen can afford to remain quiet or timid about. Our lives, our children's lives, and the health of all living things on the planet are all at stake.
Sincerely,
Russell Hoffman
Nuclear power faces formidable obstacles. Experience of the last several
decades has shown that electricity from nuclear power plants is an expensive
form of power when all public and private costs are considered. Nuclear
power generates high level radioactive wastes that remain hazardous for
thousands of years and increase the likelihood of nuclear weapons
proliferation. These are high costs to impose on future generations. Even
with improved reactor design, the safety of nuclear plants remains an
important concern. Can these technological, economic, environmental, and
public safety problems be overcome? This remains an open question. Further
public support to help resolve these issues should not come at the expense
of an aggressive campaign to develop energy conservation and renewable
energy sources.
Delivered-To: alias-animatedsoftware-com-rhoffman@animatedsoftware.com
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250 SCIENTISTS EXPRESS GRAVE CONCERN OVER WHITE HOUSE ENERGY PLAN
An Open Letter to the American People
Scientists for a Sustainable Energy Future is a group of natural and social
scientists who study the connections among energy, the environment, and
society, and who are concerned with the direction of the nation's energy
policy.
respond email this article print subscribe to TP.c
Editor's Note: Cutler J. Cleveland organized and circulated the following
letter. He is a professor at Boston University, where he directs the Center
for Energy and Environmental Studies. He can be reached at (617)353-3083, or
at cutler@bu.edu.
May 18, 2001
Dear Fellow Citizens,
We are natural and social scientists who study the connections among energy,
the environment, and society. We write to you out of grave concern with the
turn the nation's energy policy has taken. Decisions taken today about the
supply and use of energy have far reaching implications for our economic
prosperity and for the health of our environment. Since the first "energy
crisis" almost 30 years ago, a large body of research in the nation's
universities, national laboratories, think tanks, and private sector has
produced large advances in our understanding of energy issues. We would like
to share some of this information with you because the current direction of
the nation's energy policy is inconsistent with much of this work.
Conventional forms of energy have grabbed the policy spotlight in recent
months, but this emphasis is misplaced, and, ultimately, counterproductive.
We produce slightly less than half of the oil we consume; by 2020 we will
produce just 35 percent. Can a policy to encourage domestic oil extraction
reduce dependence on imported oil and maintain the price of gasoline and
home heating oil at reasonable levels? The simple answer is no, because the
domestic oil resource base is depleted to the extent that large investments
in drilling cannot generate a commensurate increase in oil supply.
Extraction and proven reserves of oil have dropped considerably since their
peaks in 1970 despite a massive drilling campaign in the late 1970s and
early 1980s. Because domestic oil sources are more costly than overseas
alternatives, incentives to encourage exploration and development will hurt
the economy in the same way they did 20 years ago when the oil price shocks
produced record rates of drilling. A large diversion of capital investment
and profits to the oil industry ensued, but oil extraction continued to
decline, as it has to this day. There is every reason to believe that the
same scenario will play out if political decisions are made to promote
domestic extraction.
Opening the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil exploration will not
improve our energy security, nor will it have any impact on the price of
gasoline. The economically recoverable amount of oil in the Refuge is just
152 days of supply for the nation. More importantly, if we started drilling
in the Refuge today, the Department of Energy projects that by 2020 it could
supply 1.4 million barrels per day. By then world oil production will be in
the range of 100 million barrels per day. The Refuge would amount to about 1
percent of global oil supply, and thus have a trivial influence on the
ability of oil exporters to influence prices.
Nuclear power faces formidable obstacles. Experience of the last several
decades has shown that electricity from nuclear power plants is an expensive
form of power when all public and private costs are considered. Nuclear
power generates high level radioactive wastes that remain hazardous for
thousands of years and increase the likelihood of nuclear weapons
proliferation. These are high costs to impose on future generations. Even
with improved reactor design, the safety of nuclear plants remains an
important concern. Can these technological, economic, environmental, and
public safety problems be overcome? This remains an open question. Further
public support to help resolve these issues should not come at the expense
of an aggressive campaign to develop energy conservation and renewable
energy sources.
Conservation must be front and center in our energy future.
Conservation must be front and center in our energy future. Unfortunately,
energy conservation is painted as a return to the Stone Age, conjuring
images of people huddling in the cold of their living rooms in front of
lifeless TVs. But in reality, just the opposite is the case. In the last 20
years some of the country's best scientists and engineers have produced
great innovations in the efficient use of energy. Cars that get 70 or more
miles per gallon, appliances that use half the energy they did ten years
ago, lighting fixtures that last for years at a fraction of the energy cost,
and new homes that heat and cool with modest amounts of energy are proven
winners in energy and economic terms. Just a 3 mile-per-gallon increase in
the fuel efficiency of SUVs alone would reduce U.S. oil consumption more
than the entire Arctic National Wildlife Refuge could supply. A study by
five national laboratories concluded that a government-led efficiency
program emphasizing research and incentives to adopt new technologies could
reduce the growth in electricity demand by as much 47 percent. This would
drastically reduce our need to build new power plants.
Many forms of renewable energy have enjoyed equally impressive advances. The
cost of electricity from wind turbines and photovoltaics has plummeted in
the last two decades, making power from these systems increasingly
cost-competitive with conventional sources in some regions of the country.
Compared to oil and coal, renewable energy produces small amounts of the
pollutants that presently impair the health of people, degrade our lakes and
forests, lower crop yields, and damage buildings, bridges, and other
structures. Most notable is their near absence of greenhouse gases,
pollutants that contribute to climate change.
On the subject of climate change, a lot of misinformation has obscured the
scientific research. We want you to know these important and irrefutable
facts. The overwhelming majority of scientists who study climate change have
concluded that (1) the Earth is warming much faster than it has in previous
centuries for which we can measure temperature change, and (2) human use of
energy produces most of the greenhouse gases that contribute to this
warming. In other words, climate change is real and directly related to
present patterns of energy consumption. The costs of adjusting to a warmer
world could be large and unpredictable, and they would be disproportionately
borne by the poorer nations. Energy use in American homes, cars and
factories has been a large source of greenhouse gases. We believe that this
places a burden on the U.S. to lead the international effort to curb the
release of these pollutants. Instead we have done just the opposite,
thumbing our nose at the Kyoto Protocol, the international agreement to
limit greenhouse gas emissions. As a result, we are now viewed
internationally as an environmental pariah. The U.S. must face its
responsibility by engaging the international community on the climate change
issue, and by reducing our emission of greenhouse gases. This means more
energy from natural gas, renewable hydrogen and geothermal sources, and less
coal and oil. Above all it calls for an accelerated development and adoption
of energy conservation and renewable technologies. We also must lead the
effort to help less fortunate nations find and fund the path of development
that improves their quality of life with minimal de-stabilization of the
Earth's climate.
There has been a lot of talk in Washington about the need for renewables and
conservation, but action seriously lags behind the rhetoric. The budget
submitted to Congress last month calls for a large cut in funding for these
technologies while proposing greater incentives for conventional fuels. This
would speed us in the direction opposite from one that would improve our
energy security, reduce pollution, help stabilize the Earth's climate, and
maximize our economic flexibility. We urge you to join us in the campaign
for a sensible and sustainable energy future.
Click here to view the letter's 250-plus signatories.
____________________________________________________________
==^================================================================
From: "Russell D. Hoffman"
Subject: Re: WALL: open letter to Bush (250 energy scientists)
Cc: jenjill@proaxis.com
Carlsbad, California
My own "STOP CASSINI" web site:
www.animatedsoftware.com/cassini/index.htm
Recent essays and correspondence:
www.animatedsoftware.com/cassini/cass2001/index.htm
CLIP FROM LETTER TO BUSH SIGNED BY 250 ENERGY SCIENTISTS
END OF CLIP FROM LETTER TO BUSH
LETTER TO BUSH (UNCUT)
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Subject: WALL: open letter to Bush (250 energy scientists)
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END OF LETTER TO BUSH
STOP CASSINI WEB SITE
COMPLETE TABLE OF CONTENTS
This web page has been presented on the World Wide Web by:
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First posted June, 2001.
Webwiz: Russell D. Hoffman