Skip to content
Grist home
All donations doubled!

Articles by Joseph Romm

Joseph Romm is the editor of Climate Progress and a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress.

All Articles

  • Plug-in sports car to hit showrooms in 2010

    Fisker Automotive is taking orders for its $80,000 (only $1,000 down!) "4-door plug-in hybrid sports sedan":

    fisker_quantum_phev.jpg

    The specs released so far (PDF) are:

    Performance details for the first car are impressive achieving 50 miles (80 kilometers) on a pure electric charge [sic]. Additionally, by further utilizing a gasoline or diesel engine offered by Fisker, one can extend the total range of their Fisker to more than 620 miles (1000 kilometers). The first Fisker will also deliver an extraordinary 100 miles per gallon -- performance figures that will ultimately help to reduce the need for the importation of foreign oil.

    Delivery will be in 2010, unless you drop $100,000 -- and heck, it's only $5,000 down -- for one of the first 100 in the "signature edition." Then you'll get it in Q4, 2009, "with exclusive show car package (final details to be revealed after Detroit launch, Jan. 2008)." The customer registration form is here.

    Tip o' the hat to Plug-in Partners, whose post on the car also discusses some other plug-ins that may soon be in showrooms around the globe.

    Note to readers: This blog post should not be taken as an endorsement of any product or company, particularly one that has not offered me a discount or even a test drive -- hint, hint.

  • Sen. Craig believes a cap-and-trade system is pointless

    craig.jpgOK, maybe it's a good thing that the morally-challenged senator is on the other side of the debate. He recently said:

    My position is perfectly clear: a cap and trade system is obsolete in its approach to green house gas reductions, it has not worked, and I do not see it working.

    Yes a very good position for a delayer, since a carbon tax is a political nonstarter (and dubious for other reasons), while a technology-only strategy can't do the job.

  • Wind power installations set to soar 63 percent this year

    wind-turbines3.jpgSome good energy news:

    US wind power installations are projected to jump 63 percent this year amid concern about global warming and rising fuel prices, an industry group said on Wednesday.

    The US wind industry is on track to complete a total of 4,000 megawatts worth of installations in 2007, or about enough to power 1 million average homes, according to the American Wind Energy Association [AWEA].

    Tip o' the hat to state renewable energy standards and the federal production tax credit.

    You can get more details from the AWEA website, including the third-quarter market report. Here are some state highlights:

    • Texas again added the largest amount of new wind power generation (600 MW).
    • Colorado installed 264 MW and now ranks as the state with the sixth-largest amount of wind power generation.
    • Washington, with 140 MW of new wind capacity, pulls ahead of Minnesota into fourth place.

    So yes, climate progress does occur, when the government works at it.

    This post was created for ClimateProgress.org, a project of the Center for American Progress Action Fund.

  • How should the presidential candidates convey the issue of climate change to the public?

    This post is by ClimateProgress guest blogger Bill Becker, Executive Director of the Presidential Climate Action Project.

    -----

    We've seen in Part I that the political climate is changing. How should presidential candidates talk about climate in the 2008 campaign?

    My advice to the candidates is to love the global warming deniers and delayers to death and to handle the economic issue head-on. Invite them into constructive discussion. Elevate the dialogue. Emphasize without stopping or deviation that climate change is not a partisan issue, and it should not be a political issue. Talk about the massive new global markets awaiting innovative American technologies, about climate change as the next great challenge for the nation's genius, about how tackling climate change is our path to security and prosperity in the 21st century. It happens to be the truth.

    Follow Barack Obama's example of truth-telling. He had the guts earlier this year to tell the Detroit Economic Club that we need to raise CAFE standards. He won praise from Time columnist Joe Klein this week for refusing to pander to voters.

    Klein spent a day with Obama in Iowa and watched him handle a question about global warming. Obama talked about the need for a cap-and-trade regime to reduce carbon emissions, then said: "One of the themes of this campaign is to tell voters what they need to hear, not just what they want to hear ... So I've got to tell you there will be a cost to this -- and the utility companies will pass it along to consumers. You can expect a spike in electricity prices." Then he added the critical message: new technologies will eventually bring prices back down.

    Obama also could have said this: