6/18/2007 7:15:44 PM
A 4% increase in fuel economy yearly seems excessive to me, but a mandate for 35MPG average doesn't seem unreasonable at all.15% power from renewable sources by 2020 should be attainable, but a 10% goal would also be appropriate if they wanted to compromise.
6/18/2007 7:26:48 PM
I'm guessing that by 2020 most of us will be driving electric cars so the MPG debate will be irrelevant. It all depends on how quickly battery technology advances, though.It is debatable whether any of those policies would benefit our country. If excessive regulation drives up the cost of energy, I don't think it's worth it. If the Democrats truly wanted to limit CO2 emissions, the first place to start would be incentives to build more nuclear power plants.We do have a shit-ton of coal in this country, so infrastructure dedicated towards converting it to gasoline or diesel would go a long way towards making us energy-independent.[Edited on June 18, 2007 at 7:40 PM. Reason : 2]
6/18/2007 7:37:00 PM
Gas efficiency regulation to me has nothing to do with co2 emissions/global warming... i'm thinking about avoiding peak oil meltdown and reducing dependency on foreign oil.
6/18/2007 7:39:47 PM
So then how do you feel about the democrats opposition to using liquified coal as a fuel source?
6/18/2007 7:41:59 PM
I know littler about liquified coal (other than it's coal turned in to liquid ) , so I can't comment on that.
6/18/2007 7:49:31 PM
6/18/2007 7:52:58 PM
I took that to mean vehicles sold, not installed base of drivers.
6/18/2007 8:07:58 PM
6/18/2007 8:29:25 PM