Green Politics
vs. Greenbacks
By Bob Ewegen
| T |
he time has come, the Sage Grouse said, to talk of many things – the environment, well-paying jobs, and the politics of greens.
At first glance, the Sage Grouse may seem a strange choice as the political boss of Colorado and other Western states. But to hear bloviating right-wing pundits and their political minions, the chicken-sized bird is intent upon fowl play at the expense of the energy industry and the good-paying jobs it provides.
The Sage Grouse ranges from Montana to Arizona and California to Colorado. It often shares its habitat with livestock, oil and gas drilling and even such new energy economy icons as wind-power turbines. To the dismay of the oil and gas industry, the Sage Grouse has been proposed for listing as an endangered or threatened species – a status that would impose restrictions on energy companies who want to drill on its turf.
A federal judge in 2007 ordered that the government consider listing the sage grouse under the Endangered Species Act. The howls of the energy industry lobby have twice postponed that decision, which is now scheduled for February 2010.
At first glance, this issue looks like an easy call for environmentalists, who tend to put the profits of the energy industry well after the welfare of wildlife on their lists of priorities. But as usual, the issue isn’t quite that simple.
Some enviros want to stop drilling entirely in places like Colorado’s Roan Plateau, a treasure trove of relatively clean energy estimated to contain 8.9 trillion cubic feet of natural gas on its federally owned portions. Other Coloradans supported a compromise plan for development of the Roan crafted by Harris Sherman, Gov. Bill Ritter’s natural resources chief. The outgoing Bush administration rejected Sherman’s thoughtfully balanced proposals in favor of a more development-oriented plan drafted under the aegis of former Colorado Republican Governor Bill Owens. Environmentalists rushed to file suit to halt that plan.
Then, Barack Obama was elected president and appointed former Colorado Sen. Ken Salazar Secretary of the Interior Department, which oversees the Roan and much else of America’s public lands. Salazar was a supporter of Sherman’s plan.
Salazar, in turn, appointed Democrat Tom Strickland as Assistant Secretary of the Interior. One of Strickland’s senior advisors is Michael Bean, a former attorney for the Environmental Defense Fund – where he spent a lot of time trying to protect the Sage Grouse.
Adding to the Greening of Interior, Salazar named noted environmentalist Will Shafroth, a founding director of the Colorado Conservation Trust and Great Outdoors Colorado Trust Fund, as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish, Wildlife and Parks.
So, it’s game, set and match, right? The Sage Grouse and other wildlife will be protected from the grasping hands of the natural gas lobby?
Uhh, not necessarily. A couple of huge events have affected the political balance in the West since Sherman proposed his compromise for the Roan.
The first is the devastating economic downturn that Obama inherited from Bush – the worst since Herbert Hoover handed off a ravaged nation to Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933. That recession chilled the gold-rush mentality in Colorado’s energy industry and caused many rigs to shut down. Falling prices and difficulty in financing had far more to do with that retrenchment than the modest regulations imposed on drillers by the Ritter Administration. But Republican gubernatorial wannabes were quick to blame Colorado’s economic woes on Ritter and other advocates of balancing resource development with environmental concerns.
That’s obvious political bombast, to put it politely. But there are legitimate policy reasons to support responsible development of natural gas. Most obviously, there is the growing consensus that the world’s climate is changing and that human activity plays a significant role in that change. From the standpoint of greenhouse gases, coal is the clearly identified villain, with the much-touted “clean coal” so far proving about as much of an oxymoron as “safe sex.”
But natural gas only puts out half as much carbon dioxide per BTU of energy as its bituminous rival. That’s because natural gas has an extra hydrogen molecule and thus when oxidized produces one molecule of H2O – water – for each molecule of CO2.
Natural gas comes out even better when teamed with those heros of the climate change debate, solar power and wind power. Solar can only be generated by day, wind comes mostly by night. Both therefore need to be supplemented by reliable “baseline” electrical power. There are ways to store solar energy for use at night or during cloudy periods, such as using mirrors to heat hot salts that can be used to generate steam at other times. Wind energy, in turn, can be used to force water up the reversible turbines in such “yo-yo” hydroelectric facilities as Xcel Energy’s Cabin Creek Pumped Storage Project. That water can flow back down again some hot afternoon to power your air conditioner.
Alas, we’re still a long way from having enough solar and wind energy capacity to replace fossil fuels entirely, even if we could store this clean energy for 24/7 use. For now, natural gas is the best choice to fill the gap left by wind and solar. Besides its relatively cleaner burn, natural gas generators can come on line much faster than coal-fired or nuclear plants, so they can kick in extra kilowatts if the wind suddenly dies down. And natural gas is readily adaptable to power automobiles, halving the CO2 emissions of gasoline-powered vehicles.
Ritter, who has staked his re-election chances on his “New Energy Economy” initiatives, is keenly aware of the need for balance between environmental protection and responsible energy development. Despite the hectoring of his Republican challengers over Ritter’s regulatory policy, Forbes magazine just rated Colorado as having the fourth best overall business climate of the 50 states. Whatever the feds decide on the Sage Grouse’s status, there is room in our new energy economy for both wild life and responsible energy development.
![Jaguarundi I [FWS] U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Image (Public Domain)](http://theblackacrejournal.files.wordpress.com/2009/06/jaguarundi-i-fws.png?w=500&h=410)

