Los Angeles Times

Obama mocks ‘fossil fuel interests’

The president invokes free-market principles to promote his clean-energy plan.

- By Lisa Mascaro and Christi Parsons lisa.mascaro@latimes.com christi.parsons@latimes.com Mascaro reported from Las Vegas and Parsons from Washington.

LAS VEGAS — President Obama cited free-market principles in making the case for alternativ­e energy Monday night, speaking on a day when his administra­tion also announced new government support for clean-energy industries.

In remarks to the National Clean Energy Summit, which included solar entreprene­urs, Obama mocked “fossil fuel interests” and old-guard businesses for breaking with their free-market arguments and opposing the new competitio­n from alternativ­e energy.

“Pushing for new laws to roll back renewable energy standards … that’s a problem,” Obama said. “That’s not progress, that’s not innovation. That’s trying to protect old ways of doing business.”

Americans are choosing wind and solar “not because they’re tree huggers, but because they’re cost-cutters,” he said. “They like saving money.”

In Washington earlier in the day, the administra­tion cited another motivation: that the government should boost clean-energy businesses for the sake of a better environmen­t.

Energy Secretary Ernest J. Moniz announced that his department would issue $1 billion in loan guarantees for “distribute­d energy projects” that use innovative technology.

And Housing and Urban Developmen­t Secretary Julian Castro announced that his agency would make financing available for singlefami­ly housing to make it easier for families to invest in clean-energy technologi­es.

Together, the two agencies announced a new scoring system that measures homes’ energy efficiency, along with plans to increase consumers’ borrowing power for buying efficient homes.

“We only have one chance to get this right,” Castro said in a conference call with reporters. “This is the only planet we have.”

Thus, the White House previewed two different arguments of the coming “climate season,” a four-month period that officials hope will culminate in a strong December agreement among world leaders to fight climate change.

Obama’s goal is to cut overall U.S. emissions by 26% to 28% from 2005 levels over the next decade and to encourage other countries to follow suit.

In high-profile trips this month, Obama will highlight the grave risks scientists connect to climate change. On Thursday, he’ll go to New Orleans to mark the 10-year anniversar­y of devastatin­g Hurricane Katrina, and next week he’ll visit Alaska on a four-day trip to talk about the melting polar ice caps.

Responding to the threat of climate change was among the most prominent pledges of Obama’s second inaugural address, when he said failure to do so “would betray our children and future generation­s.”

At Monday’s Las Vegas summit, the message was largely economic.

The American economy grew under an old way of doing things, Obama said, when “we were less worried about dependence on fossil fuel.”

Changing times present opportunit­ies, he said, but create resistance from those who prospered under the old way.

“That’s trying to protect old ways of doing business,” Obama said. “That has the potential to hurt a lot of communitie­s and set back America’s leadership in fighting climate change.”

Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), host of the summit for eight years, spoke in macroecono­mic terms.

“Our electric grid has barely changed in a century, but that is quickly coming to an end,” he said. “American demand for clean, reliable power choices is forcing change that is accelerati­ng.”

Businesses should adapt new strategies just as baseball did, Reid said, noting that Oakland A’s General Manager Billy Beane figured out how to make smarter, more efficient choices by using an “analytical, evidenceba­sed approach to assemble a baseball team.”

“The Oakland Athletics succeeded because they were willing to adapt in the face of a challenge,” he said, recounting the story from the book and movie “Moneyball.” “The same approach should be true in business.”

Republican critics are not impressed with Democrats’ take on alternativ­e energies, and the debate is flourishin­g on the presidenti­al campaign trail.

In Ottumwa, Iowa, on Monday, GOP presidenti­al hopeful Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal argued that Obama’s programs were not helping the American economy.

“We cannot grow the government economy and the American economy at the same time,” Jindal said. “You have to choose. Obama ... chose the government economy. I choose the American economy.”

In Las Vegas, Obama cast the situation another way. “We’re taking steps to allow more Americans to join this revolution with no money down,” he said.

Other executive actions and private-sector commitment­s the administra­tion announced Monday include:

Approving a transmissi­on line to help bring online a 485-megawatt photovolta­ic facility to be constructe­d in Riverside County. The Blythe Mesa plant would produce enough renewable energy for more than 145,000 homes, according to an administra­tion document.

Awarding $24 million for 11 projects in seven states aiming to develop “innovative solar technologi­es” that would double the energy a solar panel could produce.

Commitment­s from local government­s, utilities and businesses to promote energy efficiency in more than 300,000 low-income households.

 ?? Mike Nelson
European Pressphoto Agency ?? PRESIDENT OBAMA and Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid at the National Clean Energy Summit in Las Vegas. “Our electric grid has barely changed in a century, but that is quickly coming to an end,” Reid said.
Mike Nelson European Pressphoto Agency PRESIDENT OBAMA and Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid at the National Clean Energy Summit in Las Vegas. “Our electric grid has barely changed in a century, but that is quickly coming to an end,” Reid said.

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