
Not so long ago, American energy policy might have included
carbon-busting endeavors like cap-and-trade. But now, politicians’ focus
has turned to clean energy, which Congress isn’t exactly rushing to
support. In last week’s State of the Union,
President Obama pointed out that his administration was doing what it
could without Congress. The Navy is committed to ramping up clean
energy. And Obama had directed his administration to facilitate the
development of clean energy on public lands—enough to power 3 million
homes.
That promise isn’t quite as ambitious as it sounds: In
2005, a Republican Congress passed a bill requiring 10,000 megawatts of
clean energy to go on public lands by 2015. But the Obama administration
has been hustling to meet that goal, which it moved up by three years,
to the end of 2012. The Interior Department oversees public lands, and
by 2009, it had approved zero megawatts of solar projects. Since then,
the department has approved more than 5,500 megawatts of solar projects,
plus a handful of wind and geothermal efforts. In 2012, Interior is prioritizing projects
that would provide 7,000 megawatts of energy, including a gigantic wind
installation in Wyoming that’s rated at 3,000 megawatts. If these
projects move along on schedule, the Obama administration will meet its
self-imposed deadline and the 3-million-home mark the president touted
last week.