CA to Secretary Salazar: No Offshore Drilling, More Renewable Energy

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Last week, Secretary of the Interior, Ken Salazar, hosted the last of 4 public forums around the country to gather input on offshore drilling and offshore renewable energy development. Choosing to end in San Francisco means he is going back to Washington with a resounding “No” in his ears. “No” to offshore drilling and “Yes” to investing in renewable energy, and any other new green technology San Francisco start-ups can figure out.

Last week, Secretary of the Interior, Ken Salazar, hosted the last of 4 public forums around the country to gather input on offshore drilling and offshore renewable energy development. Choosing to end in San Francisco means he is going back to Washington with a resounding "No" in his ears. "No" to offshore drilling and "Yes" to investing in renewable energy, and any other new green technology San Francisco start-ups can figure out.

All the California elected officials on the dais (Boxer, Lee, Speire, Napolitano, Woolsey, Lt Governor Garamendi) and Oregon governor Kulongoski made very clear, and sometimes even passionate, statements to the effect that CA needs and values its coastline the way it is, and the potential output of oil (estimated 1% of US daily consumption by 2030) comes no where near to justifying the risk posed to its economy and ecosystem.

Such unanimous state-wide opposition seems likely to deter the federal government from moving forward with these leases, if they were thinking about doing that in CA in the first place. The more interesting part of the conversation was about renewable energy. As in any political conversation, specific commitments were hard to find, but the interest was clear, and that bodes well for companies in this sector.

Secretary Salazar was intent on hearing the details for what might really work. With both the elected officials and the public making comment he pushed for more specific data regarding the viability of different renewable energy projects, particularly the time frame in which they could be contributing to the larger grid. Politicians are good at not being pinned down, and none of these would commit to a time frame, but various business owners in the audience did.

One principal of an offshore wind platform company said their first installation will be in Portugal in 2010, finished in a few years and will generate 150 Megawatts of energy. They will have a project in Oregon within about 5 years, and sited 13 miles offshore, so people can still have their ocean views. That seems like a good investment as opposed to getting 1% of our oil by 2030.

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