Friday, January 25, 2008

Jeb Bush goes nuclear, by gimleteye

Today, the Miami Herald prints a pro-nuke editorial by Jeb Bush. The newspaper editors should have provided, but did not, a disclaimer whether Bush could personally profit from the expansion of nuclear power.

This is an issue because only a few weeks ago, Jeb!--Florida's former two-term governor-- refused to tell the mainstream media the specific terms of his consulting contract with Lehman Brothers, the bond firm he joined shortly after leaving the governor's mansion that sold the state of Florida billions of dollars of toxic junk debt.

For that reason alone, the Miami Herald owed its readers a disclosure whether Bush would profit from the expansion of nuclear power, either as a consultant or investor in companies planning to profit from the new nuclear future.

Is he a paid consultant, for instance, like former EPA administrator Christine Todd Whitman who also is a regular visitor to Ocean Reef Club in Key Largo? Ocean Reef is scarcely ten miles from Turkey Point literally at the edge of Biscayne National Park, where FPL is planning to spend $100 million just in the planning and permitting phase of its proposal to build two new nuclear reactors.

FPL hired all sorts of lobbyists to push through the one roadblock that local government could have raised in Miami Dade County--a special use permit--and managed to gain the permit without disclosing any details on substantive issues like cooling water supply (where will it come from, in a time of chronic drought?) and fill pad material : FPL proposes to raise 300 acres some 20 feet high to accommodate the new nuclear reactors that in 50 to 100 years will be threatened by sea level rise.

Did Jeb ever talk to Ocean Reef Club members about nuclear power? Did he talk to them about nuclear power, this week?

As governor, Jeb Bush was a ferocious advocate for the unsustainable growth that mars the Florida landscape. He was its biggest champion, with key fund raising advocates like Al Hoffman of WCI Communities paving his way to the governor's mansion.

Now the costs are visible in high relief: today's world-wide credit crisis that ties back to the influence of local production home builders in Florida on Jeb's campaign trail.

So when Jeb Bush advocates a particular industry, precedent would lead to judicious questions about the nature of his involvement.

Yesterday Miami-based Lennar, one of the nation's largest homebuilders, declared a loss of $1.25 billion in the fourth quarter of last year. The Herald reported today, "Lennar recorded a $852 million tax refund because of losses on land sales." That's not a bad refund, is it, on land development practices that have created chaos in the marketplace and disasters on America's landscapes.

Realize, that the price of land established by speculators like Lennar and its supply chain set the floor for purchases of environmentally sensitive land by the State of Florida, making sugar growers and big farmers who supported Jeb punch drunk with unrealized profit and deforming representative democracy in the process.

It is one thing to speculate and suppress caution with the Everglades: with nuclear power it is an different order of problem.

That is why nuclear power is the choice of last resort. It the choice after every option of public policy has been exhausted to conserve energy and reform the power grid, giving users the right to produce wherever possible and to sell back to the grid at the same rates they are charged.

The nation's utilities are a long, long way from supporting market incentives to reform the energy grid. So, when you see everyone rush over to nuclear, you have to wonder who put the bet in and who is cashing out early. Given Jeb Bush's track record as governor, it is well within the range of probability that what you see, is not even close to the whole story.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Jeb bush calls nuclear clean, but it is not. It uses massive amounts of water, heats the atmosphere, and produces hazardous nuclear waste that lasts for eons.

Anonymous said...

In the Herald article Jeb says:

Change is good.

That reminds me of the movie Wall Street:

Greed is good.

Be careful what you wish for. Germany and France are going off Nuclear and we are starting up again. Why? We should look at that more closely.

Anonymous said...

Oh the Bush family. Not fit for heaven or hell, they remain on earth wreaking havoc;causing pain and suffering to rain upon the world.
In a world where there are still people who believe what this family says, anything is possible.