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New Era Of Energy Exploration Called For
NEWTON, IA (AP) - President Barack Obama, standing in the shell of a once-giant
Maytag appliance factory that now houses a wind energy company, declared that
a “new era of energy exploration in America” would be crucial to
leading the nation out of an economic crisis.
With pieces of wind turbine towers as a backdrop, Obama touted the small
manufacturing firm as a success and as a step toward reducing the United States’ reliance
on polluting fuels. But as the president on Earth Day set a goal for wind to
generate as much as 20 percent of the U.S. electricity demand by 2030, legislation
to make that a reality faced a challenge back in Washington in the Democratic-led
Congress.
“
The nation that leads the world in creating new energy sources will be the nation
that leads the 21st century global economy,” Obama said in a state that
launched him on the road to the White House with a surprise upset over one-time
rival Hillary Rodham Clinton.
“ America can be that nation. America must be that nation. And while we
seek new forms of fuel to power our homes and cars and businesses, we will rely
on the
same ingenuity - the same American spirit - that has always been a part of
our American story.”
It’s an American spirit, though, that has been damped with economic
downturn and financial crisis.
The president left Washington for a few hours to visit this small Iowa town,
which took a huge economic hit when Maytag Corp. shut its doors in 2007.
The Maytag plant employed some 4,000 in a town of 16,000 residents in jobs
that
paid about $30,000 to $40,000 a year.
In its place is Trinity Structural Towers, a 90-person manufacturing firm
that makes parts of wind turbines the president hopes to expand on land and
at sea
through the government’s first plan to harness ocean currents to produce
energy.
“
Now, the choice we face is not between saving our environment and saving our
economy,” Obama said. “The choice we face is between prosperity and
decline. We can remain the world’s leading importer of oil, or we can become
the world’s leading exporter of clean energy.”
In Washington, the president’s plan to increase alternative energy sources
and create environmentally friendly jobs hit some snags despite Obama’s
fellow Democrats controlling both chambers of Congress. Energy Secretary Steven
Chu, EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson and Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood reinforced
Obama’s message in testimony to a House Energy and Commerce subcommittee.
The administration’s draft bill is designed to help stem the pollution
blamed for climate change by capping greenhouse gas emissions and reducing the
nation’s reliance on fossil fuels. The goal is to reduce greenhouse
gases by 20 percent from 2005 levels by 2020, and by 83 percent by mid-century.
In Newton, Obama proclaimed that “once-shuttered factories are whirring
back to life,” although the facility he toured is a shadow of what it
replaced here about 30 miles east of Des Moines.
“
Today this facility is alive again with new industry,” Obama said, while
noting that “this community continues to struggle and not everyone has
been so fortunate as to be rehired.”
Trinity now employs about 90 people - hardly the replacement Newton so desperately
needs.
“
We’ll never have another Maytag,” said Paul Bell, a Newton police
officer who also serves in the state legislature. “Maybe we shouldn’t
have had a company here that the majority of people worked for. We put all
of our eggs in one basket.”
Recognizing the challenges remaining in Newton and scores of towns like it
coast-to-coast, Obama quickly added: “Obviously things aren’t exactly
the same as they were with Maytag.”
With the same root in realism, Obama acknowledged the United States’ energy
policy will not change instantly, given the country’s reliance on oil
and natural gas.
“
But the bulk of our efforts must focus on unleashing a new, clean-energy economy
that will begin to reduce our dependence on foreign oil, will cut our carbon
pollution by about 80 percent by 2050 and create millions of new jobs right here
in America, right here in Newton,” he said.
But it won’t come quickly. The United States imports almost 4.9 billion
barrels of oil and refined products annually. That is raw energy that cannot
be replaced, one windmill at a time.
Instead, Obama urged bold thinking - and spending - to address climate change
and energy supplies.
“
So on this Earth Day, it is time for us to lay a new foundation for economic
growth by beginning a new era of energy exploration in America,” he said
to applause.
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