Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Renewable Energy from MG&E

MG&E has a program that allows you to buy all of your electricity from renewable sources for a few cents extra per kWh.

This five-minute video profiles another family that subscribes to Madison Gas & Electric renewable power and runs two businesses out of the home. I like the fact that they mention other energy saving decisions such as owning only one car. These people remind me of my family, except they don't have an infant and their house is fixed up nicer.

I hope eventually MG&E can transition everyone over to renewable energy. The difficulty will be maintaining non-renewable production capacity for when the sun isn't shining and the wind isn't blowing. As a result, the cost of having over the half the population subscribed to RE might be more than a few cents a kWh. Maybe the coming decades will see new technologies to store energy from renewable sources and thereby obviate the need for non-renewable electricity sources altogether.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Admitting the Problem Is the First Step

Contrary to what John McCain suggested at the beginning of this crisis, the fundamentals of the economy are not strong, and some of the root causes of this crisis had to do with the day-to-day struggles that ordinary people are going through with flat wages and incomes but constantly increasing costs. That puts pressure on them to take out more debt, to use home equity loans, to try to refinance. It created an environment in which this kind of crisis potentially could occur. -Obama on Face the Nation on Sept 28, 2008
This means that, according to Obama, anyone who experiences a decrease in real income is under pressure to go into debt. People living within their means just isn't an option.

The proposed solution is a debt-financed bailout of companies and people who took on too much debt. This actually makes sense if we admit that a highly leveraged economy doesn't work. We're still arguing, though, that a good banking system involves a lot of debt and any time real wages fall it's natural to borrow to maintain consumption levels constant. We're still justifying our addiction. No program to wean us off will work until we admit we have a problem.