Hillary Clinton delivered a dose of self-styled climate change real talk to some silly college kids on Thursday. But the content doesn’t hold up well against the facts. And it certainly won’t silence the likes of Bernie Sanders and Martin O’Malley, Clinton’s fellow presidential hopefuls and her two most potent critics on the left.
The confrontation occurred during open questions at Clinton’s first New Hampshire town hall appearance. A young woman asked the former secretary of state if, as president, she’d ban fossil fuel extraction on public lands. Clinton said no: “The answer is not until we’ve got the alternatives in place. That may not be a satisfactory answer to you but I think I have to take the responsible answer.”
Then a second young woman stood up, and said she was “disappointed” in the first answer. She wondered if Clinton’s “refusal to take leadership on climate change” was because of big campaign donations from the fossil fuel industry. “No. No, it is not,” Clinton said, adding that the feel good response — “you bet I will ban extraction on public lands” — would have also been a reckless one. “We still have to run our economy, we still have to turn on the lights.”
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You can expect this to be a popular line in 2016. With a sigh and shrug, it allows politicians to distance themselves from fossil fuels without actually curbing them in the slightest. But while it used to have the added virtue of being true, we don’t really need fossil fuels to keep the lights on and run the economy.
Not anymore.
The alternatives are in place. They’ve won the sprint against fossil fuels, according to data presented this spring at the Bloomberg New Energy Finance annual summit in New York.
The world is adding more capacity for renewable power each year than coal, natural gas, and oil combined. And there’s no going back. The age of fossil fuel is ending.
This wasn’t the case just a few years ago.
And there remain’s a lot that’s right about Clinton’s answer. We get about 30% of our energy from fossil fuel extracted from federal land and waters, according to an analysis this year by the Center for American Progress and The Wilderness Society. The Powder River Basin of southeast Montana and northeast Wyoming alone supplies coal for some 200 power plants.
That’s about 40% of the market. And it’s lashed together and superglued by leases and contracts, courts and lawyers. It obeys the natural law of profits and loss: if billions are invested, billions must be made.
But this is a slow motion scandal for environmentalists. The single biggest source of greenhouse gas emissions in the U. S. isn’t planes or cars. It isn’t fracking or meat farming. It’s coal harvested from that federally owned land—land that belongs to everyone.








