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Energy Crisis Or Capitalist Crisis? By Roland Sheppard On August 14, the northeastern United States experienced its most extensive power blackout ever. The cause, according to U.S. President George Bushs statement on August 15, was the antiquated system. He might have been referring to the power grid, but the description is apt for the profit-driven capitalist system. Breakdowns in the power grid were followed by transmission line failures and successive power plant shutdowns, leading to a blackout that extended over more than 14,000 square miles and disrupted the lives of more than 50 million people. It caused at least four deaths. According to Harvey Wasserman, writing on the Free Press web site on August 15: This is the fourthand worstcompletely unnecessary major blackout of the northeast in 40 years, dating back to 1965. Its scopefrom Detroit to Ottawa, New York and New Jerseyis absolutely awesome, especially since its due to total stupidity and corruption. That stupidity and corruption exist is no doubt true, but the power failure was caused by the lack of investment by the private electricity utilities in transmission-line maintenance and upgrading, and more broadly to deteriorating infrastructure. Technicians have described an overloaded transmission system, which is badly in need of maintenance and new construction. In plain words, the grid has not been updated to deliver the power that is being produced. In the U.S., most power utilities are owned by a small number of companies, which constitute a virtual monopoly. In the past, they have been regulated to one degree or another by the state governments, which controlled, to a certain degree, pricing, minimum investment in production and transmission capacity and the amount of power produced. At the beginning of the 1900s, regulation (that also guaranteed) profits was the capitalists slogan in opposition to the demand by the then-mass Socialist Party that energy generation and supply be nationalized. Deregulation During the 1990s to the present, the meager regulations that did exist came under constant attack by both major U.S. capitalist parties, the Republicans and the Democrats. Deregulation (meaning laissez-faire capitalism) became the catchword. It was sold to the public as cost saving. The theory was that local utilities, no longer producing their own power, could negotiate among competing suppliers for the best price and pass the savings on to the consumer. The reality is that the suppliers became parent corporations of the local utilities. The first disaster of deregulation was the 2001 California energy crisis. Enron and other utility corporations, no longer regulated, fixed prices to inflate their profits and rob California of $60 billion. A year later, one of these robber barons, Enron, filed for bankruptcy, after its bosses had stolen these windfall profits. Through deregulation, the energy corporations gained ever-greater control over both production and delivery of energy throughout the U.S. To boost their profits further, they did not spend the necessary amount of money for maintenance and new equipment. As a result, the U.S. did not have power lines fully equipped to deliver sufficient electricity if there was a sudden demand. Wasserman describes it as an ancient electric grid that is obsolete if not obscene. It is a massively fragile Rube Goldberg device [Goldberg draws wacky cartoons which depict the most elaborate and ridiculous devices to accomplish the most mundane tasks] that dangerously and inefficiently carts around electricity from expensive, polluting and extremely unsafe central generating plants to buildings that waste massive amounts of energy and generate none. That the antiquated grid will crash again and again and yet again is absolutely certain. Nuclear power Such is the anarchy of capitalist production. Another benefit of deregulation has meant that nuclear power plants have become more profitable, as the price of energy has increased. This has meant the operation of nuclear power plants beyond their 40-year capacity. According to the Public Citizen organization The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), the federal agency charged with controlling the nuclear-power industry, is reevaluating the criteria it uses when considering applications for license extensions for reactors that have reached the end of the 40-year operating life allowed by their original permits. The NRC has processed 16 such license-renewal applications, and in all cases it allowed the plants corporate owners to run them for another 20 years. Other articles have pointed to these ancient power plants becoming ever-increasing liabilities in the system and increasing the possibility of a catastrophic nuclear disaster. In fact, the breakdown of nuclear power plants in Ohio have been singled out as part of the cause of the August 14 blackout. Once again, the proposed solution by Bush and other capitalist politicians is to organize a government bailout of the energy monopolies. The cost will be, at conservative estimates, $56 billion just for necessary repairs to the grid and to modernize equipment! The need for regulation and control of the energy business by the majority of the population is becoming more apparent. The case for public ownership of energy makes more and more sense. Why should workers and consumers continue to be ripped off with higher prices, taxes and worse services? It is time we had energy to meet societys needs and not for the profit of a tiny number of owners. The profits from energy could then be used to explore the use of alternative energies and eliminate the use of dangerous and polluting fossil fuels and nuclear power. The North American blackout, the Enron scandal and the deregulation crisis are indicative of a far greater problemthe crisis of capitalism in the United States. Roland Sheppard is the Peace and Freedom Candidate for Congress (8th District Seat, currently held by Nancy Pelosi, House minority leader of the Democratic Party). |
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