|
... in the News
Mahoney vows energy shift
by Kristi E. Swartz,
Palm Beach Post
August 28, 2007
JUPITER -- U.S. Rep. Tim Mahoney
remembers suffering through long gasoline lines just to fill up his
car.
But it wasn't during 2004 or 2005,
when hurricanes hit and there were only a few gas stations with
electricity available to run the pumps. It was in the 1970s, during
the Arab oil embargo.
National leaders began talking about
finding other ways - solar, hydrogen, biomass - to power the United
States, but things didn't pan out, Mahoney said.
"We never heeded that call," the Palm
Beach Gardens Democrat told about 200 people, most of them
renewable-energy advocates from around the state, who gathered
Monday at the Jupiter Beach Resort and Spa for a daylong conference
on alternative energy and climate change.
"We have to be bold, we have to be
resolute and I can tell you this: Congress is not going to roll back
the clock," Mahoney said to applause.
"This is not a temporary alarm. We're
going to make alternative energy policy that's going to last."
Mahoney said developing renewable
fuels such as biomass - plant debris, for example - in Florida is
about creating jobs, preserving the environment and shoring up
national security because the U.S. would be less dependent on
foreign oil.
The state should look at developing
electricity from the sun, wind and ocean, he said.
Florida Atlantic University hopes to
start a demonstration project on ocean energy this fall, said Rick
Driscoll, associate professor in the school's department of ocean
engineering.
"We need to adapt this technology and
bring it to Florida," Driscoll said.
Florida lagged in strong policies to
promote renewable energy until this year, when Gov. Charlie Crist
said he considered global warming the century's top issue and signed
off on initiatives that include making the state's utilities get 20
percent of their fuel from renewable sources.
Though Florida Power & Light Co. gets
half its electricity from natural gas, sister company FPL Energy LLC
is the nation's top producer of wind and solar power and is a heavy
investor in nuclear generation.
Many other states are starting
cap-and-trade emission programs and taking other steps to reduce
greenhouse gases, which are blamed for global warming, said
Henrietta McBee, the utility's director of renewable-energy project
development.
"We plan today to phase in different
programs for each of the carbon-abatement categories," McBee said.
"We will need to plan for nuclear. ... This is a daunting task, yet
as a nation I'm sure we'd be able to do it."
At a news conference later, Mahoney
praised FPL's response to Crist's new policies. The utility was one
of few in the state that didn't balk at the requirement to get 20
percent of its power from renewable fuels, he said.
"They said, 'Bring it on,'" Mahoney
said.
But FPL and other utilities have said
that goal will be difficult to meet unless nuclear power is
included.
Many of the presenters at the
conference - called Powering Florida's Energy Independence and
organized by The Public Forum Institute,
a Washington-based nonprofit think tank - agreed that the state's
best untapped renewable-energy resource is biomass.
James Fenton, executive director of
the Florida Solar Energy Center, said biomass has so much potential
that he refers to it as "baby coal."
But the first thing the state should
try is using less energy in the first place, Fenton said.
"If the goal is to be
energy-independent, that's a technology job that you can't
outsource," Fenton said.
The Cocoa-based solar center is part
of the University of Central Florida.
Though the state leads in areas such
as citrus, wood waste and forest residues, Florida won't be able to
produce electricity solely from biomass, said Lonnie Ingram,
director of the Florida Center for Renewable Chemicals and Fuels at
the University of Florida.
"We will not be able to do it all. We
will need a blend of technologies," he said.
Learn more about
the 2007 Alternative Energy Summit:
Powering Florida's Energy Independence.
|