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Since I first did the arithmetic almost ten years ago, I've been deeply skeptical about the ability of wind and solar power to eject fossil fuels and nuclear power from the global energy marketplace. At first I thought technical and logistical problems would forever restrict alternative energy to minor markets. While I still have major reservations about those issues, in a sense that's neither here nor there - those issues could be resolved for better or worse by the marketplace itself. Unfortunately, the biggest problem the alternative energy industry faces - the one that renders all other challenges moot - is not technical at all. The biggest problem that alternative energy faces in its uphill battle against the oil, coal, gas and nuclear industries is the collision between politicians and huge stacks of cash. A large number of politicians in nations large and small have been purchased by the nuclear and fossil fuel industries - either bought outright with cash, acquired indirectly through campaign donations, or enlisted at arm's length through offers of post-political directorships. These tame politicians are in a position to throw massive economic and regulatory roadblocks in the path of alternatives. In fact they are already doing that, by jiggering Feed-In-Tariffs, subsidies and insurance frameworks. Without countervailing anti-nuclear, anti-FF politicians, the expansion of renewable energy could be stopped dead in its tracks if it ever shows real promise of threatening the business model of the entrenched (and hugely profitable) nuclear and (especially) fossil fuel industries. Those suborned politicians of every stripe, in every country, are going to require a lot of coin to buy out their allegiance. The only money available to do that has to come from the infant alternative energy industry, whose pockets are anything but deep where this kind of baksheesh is concerned. Unless the problem of purchased politicians can be overcome, the technical and economic superiority of alt.energy may never be demonstrated. So to me the question seems to be, "If we want to let technical and ecological merit decide the outcome, how do we reduce the political opposition to it?" Are we limited to moral suasion? Can we come up with offsetting dollars? Can we change the funding formulas for political campaigns and reduce the power of corporate lobbying? And since this is a global issue, how much of a problem is this going to be in places like Europe and Eurasia, let alone the vastly different economic and social climates of China, India and Africa? The alt.energy industry is seriously behind the 8-ball. Not only is penetration still relatively low and a number of major infrastructure issues remain to be dealt with, but solving the political question requires the renewable industry to either buy back the opposing politicians or to convince them somehow to vote against their own pocketbooks. The nuclear and fossil fuel industries (aka "The Merchants of the New Black Death") enjoy revenues of more than $5 trillion per year, while one estimate of the renewable energy industry I found gave it a turnover of just $0.2 trillion per year. The political challenge is going to be enormous in the face of that 25:1 disparity in cashflow, not to mention the fact that most of the alt.energy money is being used for legitimate capital investment and operations, leaving little excess profit available for bribery. The arrival of Peak Oil could even make the situation worse, as the oil industry tries to shore up its faltering revenue stream by buying politicians rather than drilling rights. Unless and until the political issue is resolved, I expect the renewable industry to continue to struggle for the foreseeable future, regardless of the progress that is made in solar cell efficiency or wind turbine design. This assessment reinforces my conviction that politicians should not be considered part of the solution to the coming problems. They will by and large react only after difficulties stemming from Climate Change, Peak Oil and natural gas "fracking" have made their impact on the people, animals and plants that share the planetary biosphere. It goes without saying that we must work to repair the damage done by the collision of politics and money I mentioned above. However, for the millions of us who don't have the skills, access or interest to fight in the political arena, there are thousands of other opportunities available right around us. Right this instant we can choose to join the tens of millions of people already working around the globe on local ecological, environmental and social justice issues, and become one of "Gaia's antibodies". We should not wait for our political leaders to catch up to reality - it's far more likely that reality will catch up to them first. As citizens, members of the human community and equal participants in the web of life, we must take the initiative ourselves. In the words of the Hopi Elders, "We are the ones we have been waiting for."
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