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| Mark Jacobson. |
The article by Eduardo Porter, How Renewable Energy is
Blowing Climate Change Efforts Off Course, serves as a flagship for an on-going
attack on the growth of renewables. It is so convoluted and inaccurate that it
requires a detailed response.
As Mark Jacobson, director of Atmosphere/Energy Program at Stanford University, pointed out to me via email:
The New York Times article "suffers from the inaccurate assumption
that existing expensive nuclear that is shut down will be replaced by natural
gas. This is impossible in California, for example, since gas is currently 60
percent of electricity supply but state law requires non-large-hydro clean
renewables to be 50 percent by 2030. This means that, with the shuttering of
Diablo Canyon nuclear facility be 2025, gas can by no greater than 35-44
percent of California supply since clean renewables will be at least 50 percent
(and probably much more) and large hydro will be 6-15 percent. As such, gas
must go down no matter what. In fact, 100 percent of all new electric power in
Europe in 2015 was clean, renewable energy with no new net gas, and 70 percent
of all new energy in the U.S. was clean and renewable, so the fact is nuclear
is not being replaced by gas but by clean, renewable energy.
Read the EcoWatch story
- “NY Times Pushes Nukes While Claiming Renewables Fail to Fight Climate Change.”
(A corporate-owned
newspaper pushing an idea that only corporations can benefit from, steering the
solution away from community-owned renewable energy systems – Robert McLean.)

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