by Captain Future
Sat Mar 3rd, 2007 at 03:54:46 AM EST
There isn't much good news these days. But when there is, it's important to highlight it.
There was some very good news in Washington last week at the Apollo Summit for Clean Energy and Good Jobs, a meeting of the Apollo Alliance. A billion people saw Al Gore and others at the Oscars call for leadership to confront the Climate Crisis, and the Republican/Dirty Energy noise machine has been in high gear ever since, demonizing them and engaging in even more ferocious Climate Crisis denying. But if there is any hope in America for the global Climate Crisis future, it will depend on what Apollo and that summit represents: the blue-green alliance of blue collar and environmentalists, and the mayors and governors who make things happen as well as national legislators who keep at it regardless of where the headlines are.
Follow after the fold for some highlights and why they are important to any hope we might have for the future.
From the diaries. Here's the link to the Conference Programme, which was sent to me by a kossack who was speaking in one of the panels. In other somewhat hopeful notes, see the two most recent Energize America diaries over at Dailykos: First Energize America draft Act brought to Congress and ENERGIZE AMERICA: Neighborhood Power Act -- Draft Questions and Answers -- plus a request for help by A Siegel. "Hopeful" because Energize America is getting the attention of Congress; "somewhat" because these diaries went nowhere on DailyKos. -- Jérôme
I'm disappointed about the apparent silence in the blogosphere on this Summit. U.S. blogs are thoroughly covering the convention of conservative Republicans while ignoring a meeting that may represent the future of the Democratic party as well as some tangible progress in confronting the Climate Crisis.
I read about it on the Huffington Post, in a post by Bill Scher of the Campaign for America's Future, a partner in the Apollo Alliance. But apparently he felt constrained to bring attention to it by emphasizing competition between governors, using "battle royale" in his headline. While competition (as referred to below) will undoubtedly be a factor, the importance is cooperation: partnerships among groups formerly indifferent or even hostile to each other.
In these regards, here it some of what the Summit revealed and accomplished.
Doing It
While others argue, governors are acting. They know that most of the world is aware of the Climate Crisis, and that there is a growing need for clean energy technology. Not only because of the Climate Crisis, but the many other environmental and health disasters caused by or exacerbated by dirty energy and its byproducts.
They see also the economic consequences of dependence on foreign oil and the loss of good jobs, and they foresee the future that Peak Oil will soon bring. So they are acting.
At the Summit, Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick proclaimed his clean energy priority as a total package:
I don't just want the wind farms. I want the companies that build the turbines. I want the ones that assemble the hybrid vehicles and consult on the conservation strategies. I want the companies that design and manufacture the solar panels. The whole integrated industry ought to and can have a place in Massachusetts ... I really believe that if we get this right, the whole world will be our customer.
Then Colorado Governor Bill Ritter said he had the same goals for his state. These governors have seen what Governor Ed Rendell did in Pennsylvania: his administration brought a company(Gamesa)into the state to build wind farms and manufacture turbines. An early member of the Apollo Alliance, Rendell worked with the Democrats' traditional ally in Pennsylvania, the United Steelworkers union, and he got legislation passed that guaranteed the Commonwealth would buy enough renewable energy to give Gamesa a minimum market base. The result will be 1,000 union jobs, many in manufacturing, and the beginning of a new industry with global implications.
As Rendell told the Summit:
"What else can clean the environment, boost the economy, free us up politically in world affairs, make us better able to withstand a terrorist attack or natural disaster, and help us with our trade imbalance? There's nothing else, this ought to be our number one priority."
The Blue-Green (and other colors) Alliance
While these governors talked about jobs and economic opportunities, the important thing in hoping that this alliance can be sustained is that there is a strong committment to the environment as well: it appears to be a true alliance between blue collar and green. Carl Pope, the head of the Sierra Club, spoke at the Summit, along with Richard Trumka, AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Richard Trumka, who said: "it's time for an environmental intervention."
This is crucial because environmentalists and those in the forefront of warning about the Climate Crisis have long been marginalized as a wealthy overeducated elite out of touch with the American public (an image that the Fox Noise Machine is currently promoting in attacking Al Gore and his "Hollywood" supporters.)
On the ground, many conflicts have arisen when big companies successfully pitted workers against environmentalists (as in the Timber Wars here in California and the Pacific northwest.)
But the blue-green Apollo Alliance shatters those images and those cynically-created conflicts. The blue-green alliance is politically potent, as it could well be the basis for reinstituting and reenergizing the traditional Democratic party blue collar base. But even more importantly, it could be the basis for economic progress as well as giving us a fighting chance for the future threatened by the Climate Crisis.
There's another important part of this alliance that must be noted. Part of the elitist image of the environmental movement has been that it is lilly white. But Jerome Ringo, the inspirational President of the Apollo Alliance, is black. So is Governor Deval Patrick of Massachusetts.
Alliance at All Levels
We are absorbed by conflict, and such headlines as there were from the summit emphasized the competition for clean energy jobs expressed by the governors. But it's more important to emphasize the strength in partnerships, and the breadth of this alliance and its potential power to transform the country and maybe even the world.
The above named are not the only governors committed to clean energy and battling the Climate Crisis. Nor were those named the only union, environmental organization and government officials present at the Summit.
Trenton, N.J. Mayor Douglas Palmer spoke, (note: that's Trenton, not Beverly Hills),representing more than 372 mayors from all 50 states, plus the District of Columbia, who have signed onto the U.S. Mayors Climate Protection Agreement. Among them are mayors who are instituting clean energy programs and efforts to confront the Climate Crisis in their cities. They called for federal block grants to help them in their efforts. "we can no longer behave as if there aren't any consequences from inaction."
U.S. Representative Jay Inslee (WA) called the Apollo Alliance the "most important coalition" in America today, because "this is a matter of our American destiny ... to lead the world in solving this global warming crisis."
Senator Hillary Clinton spoke, as did Senator Bernie Sanders, who has introduced the most aggressive bill against global heating now in Congress. I'd like to end with his words on the blue-green alliance itself. "This is a marriage made in heaven. This is a marriage that will move heaven and earth."