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In
1942, President
Franklin D.
Roosevelt asked
Sen. Kenneth
McKellar, the
Tennessean who
chaired the
Appropriations
Committee, to
hide $2 billion
in the
appropriations
bill for a
secret project
to win World War
II. Senator
McKellar
replied, “Mr.
President, I
have just one
question: where
in Tennessee do
you want me to
hide it?”
That place in
Tennessee turned
out to be Oak
Ridge, one of
three secret
cities that
became the
principal sites
for the
Manhattan
Project. The
purpose of the
Manhattan
Project was to
find a way to
split the atom
and build a bomb
before Germany
could. Nearly
200,000 people
worked secretly
in 30 different
sites in three
countries.
President
Roosevelt’s $2
billion
appropriation
would be $24
billion today.
According to New
York Times
science reporter
William
Laurence, “Into
[the bomb’s]
design went
millions of
man-hours of
what is without
doubt the most
concentrated
intellectual
effort in
history.”
I propose that
the United
States launch a
new Manhattan
project: a
5-year project
to put America
firmly on the
path to clean
energy
independence.
Instead of
ending a war,
the goal will be
clean energy
independence –
so that we can
deal with rising
gasoline prices,
electricity
prices, clean
air, climate
change and
national
security – for
our country
first, and –
because other
countries have
the same urgent
needs and
therefore will
adopt our ideas
– for the rest
of the world.
By independence
I do not mean
that the United
States would
never buy oil
from Mexico or
Canada or Saudi
Arabia. By
independence I
do mean that the
United States
could never be
held hostage by
any country for
our energy
needs.
In 1942, many
were afraid that
the first
country to build
an atomic bomb
could blackmail
the rest of the
world. Today,
countries that
supply oil and
natural gas can
blackmail the
rest of the
world.
Not a new idea
A new Manhattan
Project is not a
new idea – but
it is a good
idea and fits
the goal of
clean energy
independence.
The Apollo
Program to send
men to the moon
in the 1960s was
a kind of
Manhattan
Project. John
McCain and
Barack Obama
have called for
a Manhattan
Project for new
energy sources.
So have former
House Speaker
Newt Gingrich,
Democratic
National
Committee
chairman Howard
Dean, Sen. Susan
Collins of Maine
and Sen. Kit
Bond of Missouri
– among others.
And, throughout
the two years of
discussion that
led to the
passage in 2007
of the America
COMPETES Act,
several
participants
suggested that
focusing on
energy
independence
would force the
kind of
investments in
the physical
sciences and
research that
the United
States needs to
maintain its
competitiveness.
A new
overwhelming
challenge
The overwhelming
challenge in
1942 was the
prospect that
Germany would
build the bomb
and win the war
before America
did.
The overwhelming
challenge today,
according to
National Academy
of Sciences
president Ralph
Cicerone, in his
address last
week to the
Academy’s annual
meeting, is to
discover ways to
satisfy the
human demand for
and use of
energy in an
environmentally
satisfactory and
affordable way
so that we are
not overly
dependent on
overseas
sources.
Cicerone
estimates that
this year
Americans will
pay $500 billion
overseas for oil
– that’s $1,600
for each one of
us – some of it
to nations that
are hostile or
even trying to
kill us by
bankrolling
terrorists.
Sending $500
billion abroad
weakens our
dollar. It is
half our trade
deficit. It is
forcing gasoline
prices toward $4
a gallon and
crushing family
budgets.
Then there are
the
environmental
consequences. If
worldwide energy
usage continues
to grow as it
has, humans will
inject as much
CO2 into the air
from fossil fuel
burning between
2000 and 2030 as
they did between
1850 and 2000.
There is plenty
of coal to help
achieve our
energy
independence,
but there is no
commercial way
(yet) to capture
and store the
carbon from so
much coal
burning – and we
have not
finished the job
of controlling
sulfur,
nitrogen, and
mercury
emissions.
The Manhattan
Project model
fits today. In
addition to the
need to meet an
overwhelming
challenge, other
characteristics
of the original
Manhattan
Project are
suited to this
new challenge:
-
It needs to
proceed as
fast as
possible
along
several
tracks to
reach the
goal.
According to
Don
Gillespie, a
young
engineer at
Los Alamos
during World
War II, the
“entire
project was
being
conducted
using a
shotgun
approach,
trying all
possible
approaches
simultaneously,
without
regard to
cost, to
speed toward
a
conclusion.”
-
It needs
presidential
focus and
bipartisan
support in
Congress.
-
It needs the
kind of
centralized,
gruff
leadership
that Gen.
Leslie R.
Groves of
the Army
Corps of
Engineers
gave the
first
Manhattan
Project.
-
It needs to
“break the
mold.” To
borrow the
words of Dr.
J. Robert
Oppenheimer
in a speech
to Los
Alamos
scientists
in November
of 1945, the
challenge of
clean energy
independence
is “too
revolutionary
to consider
in the
framework of
old ideas.”
-
Most
important,
in the words
of George
Cowan as
reported in
the
excellent
book edited
by Cynthia
C. Kelly,
“…The
Manhattan
Project
model starts
with a
small,
diverse
group of
great
minds.”
I said to the
National
Academies when
we first asked
for their help
on the America
COMPETES Act in
2005, “In
Washington,
D.C., most ideas
fail for lack of
the idea.” The
America COMPETES
model fits,
too. There are
some lessons,
too, from
America
COMPETES.
Remember how it
happened. Just
three years ago
– in May 2005 –
a bipartisan
group of us
asked the
National
Academies to
tell Congress in
priority order
the 10 most
important steps
we could take to
help America
keep its
brainpower
advantage.
By October, the
Academies had
assembled a
“small diverse
group of great
minds” chaired
by Norm
Augustine which
presented to
Congress and to
the President 20
specific
recommendations
in a report
called “Rising
Above the
Gathering
Storm.” We
considered
proposals by
other
competitiveness
commissions.
Then, in January
2006, President
Bush outlined
his American
Competitiveness
Initiative to
double over 10
years basic
research budgets
for the physical
sciences and
engineering. The
Republican and
Democratic
Senate leaders
and 68 other
senators
sponsored the
legislation. It
became law by
August 2007,
with strong
support from
Speaker Pelosi
and the
President.
Combining the
model of the
Manhattan
Project with the
process of the
America COMPETES
Act has already
begun. The
National
Academies have
underway an
“America’s
Energy Future”
project that
will be
completed in
2010. Ralph
Cicerone has
welcomed sitting
down with a
bipartisan group
to discuss what
concrete
proposals we
might offer
earlier than
that to the new
president and
the new
Congress. Energy
Secretary Sam
Bodman and Ray
Orbach, the
Energy
Department’s
Under Secretary
for Science,
have said the
same. There is
also bipartisan
interest in
Congress.
So, how to
proceed?
New Mexico
Senator Jeff
Bingaman’s first
reaction to the
idea of a new
Manhattan
Project was that
instead we need
several
mini-Manhattan
Projects. He
suggested as an
example the “14
Grand Challenges
for Engineering
in the 21st
Century” laid
out by former
MIT President
Chuck Vest, the
president of the
National Academy
of Engineering –
three of which
involve energy.
I agree with
Senator Bingaman
and Chuck Vest.
Congress doesn’t
do
“comprehensive”
well, as was
demonstrated by
the collapse of
the
comprehensive
immigration
bill.
Step-by-step
solutions or
different tracks
toward one goal
are easier to
digest and have
fewer surprises.
And, of course,
the original
Manhattan
Project itself
proceeded along
several tracks
toward one goal.
Here are my
criteria for
choosing several
grand
challenges:
-
Grand
consequences,
too
– The United
States uses
25 percent
of all the
energy in
the world.
Interesting
solutions
for small
problems
producing
small
results
should be a
part of some
other
project.
-
Real
scientific
breakthroughs
– This is
not about
drilling
offshore for
oil or
natural gas
in an
environmentally
clean way or
building a
new
generation
of nuclear
power
plants, both
of which we
already know
how to do –
and, in my
opinion,
should be
doing.
-
Five years
– Grand
challenges
should put
the United
States
within five
years firmly
on a path to
clean energy
independence
so that goal
can be
achieved
within a
generation.
-
Family
Budget
– Solutions
need to fit
the family
budget, and
costs of
different
solutions
need to be
compared.
-
Consensus
– The
Augustine
panel that
drafted the
“Gathering
Storm”
report
wisely
avoided some
germane
topics, such
as excessive
litigation,
upon which
they could
not agree,
figuring
that
Congress
might not be
able to
agree
either.
Seven grand
challenges:
Rather than
having members
of Congress
proclaim these
challenges, or
asking
scientists alone
to suggest them,
I believe there
needs to be
preliminary
discussion –
including about
whether the
criteria are
correct. Then,
Congress can
pose to
scientists
questions about
the steps to
take to achieve
the grand
challenges.
To begin the
discussion, I
suggest asking
what steps
Congress and the
federal
government
should take
during the next
five years
toward these
seven grand
challenges so
that the United
States would be
firmly on the
path toward
clean energy
independence
within a
generation:
1. Make
plug-in electric
cars and trucks
commonplace.
In the 1960s,
H. Ross Perot
noticed that
when banks in
Texas locked
their doors at 5
p.m., they also
turned off their
new computers.
Perot bought the
idle nighttime
bank computer
capacity and
made a deal with
states to manage
Medicare and
Medicaid data.
Banks made
money, states
saved money, and
Perot made a
billion dollars.
Idle nighttime
bank computer
capacity in the
1960s reminds me
of idle
nighttime power
plant capacity
in 2008. This is
why:
• The Tennessee
Valley Authority
has 7,000-8,000
megawatts – the
equivalent of
seven or eight
nuclear power
plants or 15
coal plants – of
unused electric
capacity most
nights.
• Beginning in
2010 Nissan,
Toyota, General
Motors and Ford
will sell
electric cars
that can be
plugged into
wall sockets.
FedEx is already
using hybrid
delivery trucks.
• TVA could
offer “smart
meters” that
would allow its
8.7 million
customers to
plug in their
vehicles to
“fill up” at
night for only a
few dollars, in
exchange for the
customer paying
more for
electricity
between 4 p.m.
and 10 pm. when
the grid is
busy.
• Sixty percent
of Americans
drive less than
30 miles each
day. Those
Americans could
drive a plug-in
electric car or
truck without
using a drop of
gasoline. By
some estimates,
there is so much
idle electric
capacity in
power plants at
night that over
time we could
replace
three-fourths of
our light
vehicles with
plug-ins. That
could reduce our
overseas oil
bill from $500
billion to $250
billion – and do
it all without
building one new
power plant.
• In other
words, we have
the plug. The
cars are coming.
All we need is
the cord.
Too good to be
true? Haven’t
U.S. presidents
back to Nixon
promised
revolutionary
vehicles? Yes,
but times have
changed.
Batteries are
better. Gas is
more expensive.
We are angry
about sending so
many dollars
overseas,
worried about
climate change
and clean air.
And, consumers
have already
bought one
million hybrid
vehicles and are
waiting in line
to buy more –
even without the
plug-in. Down
the road is the
prospect of a
hydrogen
fuel-cell hybrid
vehicle, with
two engines –
neither of which
uses a drop of
gasoline.
Still, there are
obstacles.
Expensive
batteries make
the additional
cost per
electric car
$8,000-$11,000.
Smart metering
is not
widespread.
There will be
increased
pollution from
the operation of
coal plants at
night. We know
how to get rid
of those sulfur,
nitrogen, and
mercury
pollutants (and
should do it),
but haven’t yet
found a way to
get rid of the
carbon produced
by widespread
use in coal
burning power
plants. Which
brings us to the
second grand
challenge:
2. Make
carbon capture
and storage a
reality for
coal-burning
power plants.
This was one of
the National
Academy of
Engineering’s
grand
challenges. And
there may be
solutions other
than underground
storage, such as
using algae to
capture carbon.
Interestingly,
the Natural
Resources
Defense Council
argues that,
after
conservation,
coal with carbon
capture is the
best option for
clean energy
independence
because it
provides for the
growing power
needs of the
U.S. and will be
easily adopted
by other
countries.
3. Make solar
power cost
competitive with
power from
fossil fuels.
This is a second
of the National
Institute’s
grand
challenges.
Solar power,
despite 50 years
of trying,
produces one
one-hundredth of
one percent of
America’s
electricity. The
cost of putting
solar panels on
homes averages
$25,000-$30,000
and the
electricity
produced, for
the most part,
can’t be stored.
Now, there is
new photovoltaic
research as well
as promising
solar thermal
power plants,
which capture
the sunlight
using mirrors,
turn heat into
steam, and store
it underground
until the
customer needs
it.
4. Safely
reprocess and
store nuclear
waste.
Nuclear plants
produce 20
percent of
America’s
electricity, but
70 percent of
America’s clean
electricity –
that is,
electricity that
does not pollute
the air with
mercury,
nitrogen,
sulfur, or
carbon. The most
important
breakthrough
needed during
the next five
years to build
more nuclear
power plants is
solving the
problem of what
to do with
nuclear waste. A
political
stalemate has
stopped nuclear
waste from going
to Yucca
Mountain in
Nevada, and $15
billion
collected from
ratepayers for
that purpose is
sitting in a
bank. Recycling
waste could
reduce its mass
by 90 percent,
creating less
stuff to store
temporarily
while long-term
storage is
resolved.
5. Make
advanced
biofuels
cost-competitive
with gasoline.
The backlash
toward ethanol
made from corn
because of its
effect on food
prices is a
reminder to
beware of the
great law of
unintended
consequences
when issuing
grand
challenges.
Ethanol from
cellulosic
materials shows
great promise,
but there are a
limited number
of cars capable
of using
alternative
fuels and of
places for
drivers to buy
it. Turning coal
into liquid fuel
is an
established
technology, but
expensive and a
producer of much
carbon.
6. Make new
buildings green
buildings.
Japan believes
it may miss its
2012 Kyoto goals
for greenhouse
gas reductions
primarily
because of
energy wasted by
inefficient
buildings. Many
of the
technologies
needed to do
this are known.
Figuring out how
to accelerate
their use in a
decentralized
society is most
of this grand
challenge.
7. Provide
energy from
fusion. The
idea of
recreating on
Earth the way
the sun creates
energy and using
it for
commercial power
is the third
grand challenge
suggested by the
National Academy
of Engineering.
The promise of
sustaining a
controlled
fusion reaction
for commercial
power generation
is so fantastic
that the
five-year goal
should be to do
everything
possible to
reach the
long-term goal.
The failure of
Congress to
approve the
President’s
budget request
for U.S.
participation in
the
International
Thermonuclear
Experimental
Reactor – the
ITER Project –
is embarrassing.
Anything is
possible
This country of
ours is a
remarkable
place. Even
during an
economic
slowdown, we
will produce
this year about
30 percent of
all the wealth
in the world for
the 5 percent of
us who live in
the United
States.
Despite “the
gathering storm”
of concern about
American
competitiveness,
no other country
approaches our
brainpower
advantage – the
collection of
research
universities,
national
laboratories and
private-sector
companies we
have.
And this is
still the only
country where
people say with
a straight face
that anything is
possible – and
really believe
it.
These are
precisely the
ingredients that
America needs
during the next
five years to
place ourselves
firmly on a path
to clean energy
independence
within a
generation – and
in doing so, to
make our jobs
more secure, to
help balance the
family budget,
to make our air
cleaner and our
planet safer and
healthier – and
to lead the
world to do the
same.
--###--
Lamar Alexander
is the senior
Senator from
Tennessee in the
United States
Senate. He is a
member of the
Senate
Environment and
Public Works
Committee, which
oversees clean
air and climate
change issues.
This essay is
drawn from a
speech he
delivered in
Washington, DC,
earlier this
year.
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