AUSTIN, Texas – When in the midst of a Blame Typhoon, with charges and counter-charges being hurled in all directions, I find it most useful to consult those two polar stars of utter wrongheadedness, Tom DeLay and The Wall Street Journal’s editorial page.

A column about energy politics by George Mellon in last Tuesday’s Journal contained just the right mix of irrelevant argument, expedient forgetfulness and perfectly delightful nuttiness. “Millions of Naderites are trying to peddle windmill farms, even though these inefficient H.G. Wells monsters are already destroying the scenic beauty of places like Palm Springs and the Dutch coast.”

When Mellon goes on the aesthetic offensive against unsightly windmills – as compared to the ever-so-sightly coal-fired plant, oil refinery and nuclear power catastrophe-in-waiting – we must snap to attention. Mellon may be interested to know that in Austin we can purchase “green energy” from the windmill farm near Fort Stockton in West Texas for 2.85 cents per kilowatt hour, and that cost is guaranteed not to increase for the next eight years. Regular old electricity from Austin Energy, a municipally owned company, is now undergoing a three-step price increase that will move its fuel charge from 1.774 cents to 2.796 by the end of this coming January.

Mellon works for our most respected financial newspaper: Did the price of energy in the East just spike from $100 to over $1,000 per megawatt hour, or did the Journal misreport that?

As for the aesthetics of windmills, most people find them fascinating to watch. Cars pull over by the highway in West Texas so the kids can watch the things go round and round. The only trouble with the wind farm out by Palm Springs is that the fools built it in a bird flyway, which could easily have been avoided.

Clean, cheap, endless energy – no radioactive waste, no air pollution, no strip mining, no oil spills and no gas pipeline explosions. Yet the Bush administration wants to spend billions subsidizing coal, oil, gas and nuclear power, and leave both wind and solar technology – with all their advantages, including cost – unsubsidized and unhelped. Now, is that a stupid policy or what?

Every energy source in this country has been vastly subsidized, including hydropower by government-built dams. If wind power were subsidized at a fraction of what we already spend with tax breaks, loopholes and outright corporate welfare for polluting and destructive energy sources, it would already be the cheapest, not to mention the cleanest, energy source available. This is not pie-in-sky Naderism (whatever that is), this is right now, 2.85 cents per kilowatt hour. In New York City, the price for power generation charged by ConEd hovers around 10 cents per kilowatt hour. Eat it.

And why do we have such dumb, damaging, self-destructive energy policies? Do you think it has anything to do with corporate campaign contributions? Do you think it has any connection to the fact that Dick Cheney wrote the National Energy Plan? A couple of Ken Lay’s suggestions in his famous memo to Cheney were incorporated word-for-word in the Cheney plan.

As for the always-egregious Tom DeLay, the Exterminator, two years ago he blocked a program of loan guarantees for upgrades to the transmission system. Said he of the Democratic proposal, “It’s pure demagoguery.”

Now, according to The New York Times, the Republicans are refusing again to pass stand-alone transmission-grid improvements. They insist on including the rest of the Cheney rip-and-run plan, including drilling for oil in the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge and other economically marginal and environmentally disastrous schemes.

They are on the wrong side of history, the wrong side of economics, the wrong side of technology, the wrong side of progress and the wrong side of the environment.

Guys, better, cleaner, cheaper sources of power are now available. Get your heads out of the sand and join the 21st century.

Molly Ivins is a syndicated columnist.


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