New York Times columnist Bob Herbert found hope in a new industry here in Metro Detroit.
Excerpt:
I found real reason to hope when a gentleman named Stan Ovshinsky
took me on a tour of a remarkably quiet and pristine manufacturing
plant in Auburn Hills, which is about 30 miles north of Detroit and is
home to Chrysler's headquarters. What is being produced in the plant is
potentially revolutionary. A machine about the length of a football
field runs 24 hours a day, seven days a week, turning out mile after
mile after mile of thin, flexible solar energy material, from which
solar panels can be sliced and shaped.
You want new industry in
the United States, with astonishing technological advances, new mass
production techniques and jobs, jobs, jobs? Try energy.
...
The point is that these (and many more) brilliant, innovative
technologies are here. They are real, tangible. They exist. What's
needed now is the will to develop policies that will vastly expand
these advances and radically reduce their costs. The United States
should be leading the world in the creation of whole new energy
technologies and industries, instead of allowing the forces of the old
carbon-based industries — coal, oil, gasoline-powered vehicles — to
stand obstinately in the way of real progress.
Read the entire article
here.
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