speedracer
Banned
The cash for clunkers didn't go over very well. The waste created by perfectly fine cars being crushed along with the relatively lax gas efficiency increase standards seemed to rub everyone the wrong way. Bernie Sanders introduced a bill a couple of days ago that seems very much like the cash for clunkers, with 100% less stupid.
It proposes $2-3 billion a year for 10 years for federal incentives and rebates for solar installations and solar hot water heaters (which are fabulously efficient in many parts of the country but simply not used). He says that the goal is threefold:
1. Dramatically reduce the cost of solar installations to the end user. A $40,000 installation would cost the consumer roughly $15k, which makes it much more cost effective to do so. They can also be tied to the grid, allowing consumers to sell to the utility.
2. Dramatically increase demand, thereby using market forces to decrease material costs via economies of scale.
3. Immediately create jobs, which it would undoubtedly do.
He forecasts that all told, it would provide 30 gigawatts of power, or 30 nuclear plants. With the federal guarantees required to build nuclear at $6-10 billion a pop, that's a helluva deal. [1] Also, I'm a huge fan of anything that takes even a little bit of money out of the Middle East and Chavez's pocket.
those guys.
Any reason not to love it?
http://www.treehugger.com/files/2010/02/new-bill-create-10-million-solar-roofs-us.php
edit: my federal guarantee number was wrong. It was more than I thought.
[1]http://www.thebulletin.org/web-edition/features/maximizing-us-federal-loan-guarantees-new-nuclear-energy
It proposes $2-3 billion a year for 10 years for federal incentives and rebates for solar installations and solar hot water heaters (which are fabulously efficient in many parts of the country but simply not used). He says that the goal is threefold:
1. Dramatically reduce the cost of solar installations to the end user. A $40,000 installation would cost the consumer roughly $15k, which makes it much more cost effective to do so. They can also be tied to the grid, allowing consumers to sell to the utility.
2. Dramatically increase demand, thereby using market forces to decrease material costs via economies of scale.
3. Immediately create jobs, which it would undoubtedly do.
He forecasts that all told, it would provide 30 gigawatts of power, or 30 nuclear plants. With the federal guarantees required to build nuclear at $6-10 billion a pop, that's a helluva deal. [1] Also, I'm a huge fan of anything that takes even a little bit of money out of the Middle East and Chavez's pocket.

Any reason not to love it?
http://www.treehugger.com/files/2010/02/new-bill-create-10-million-solar-roofs-us.php
edit: my federal guarantee number was wrong. It was more than I thought.
[1]http://www.thebulletin.org/web-edition/features/maximizing-us-federal-loan-guarantees-new-nuclear-energy
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