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Alternative Energy Voices Fight To Be Heard At Copenhagen (VIDEO)

First Posted: 03/18/10 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 03:50 PM ET

Special To The Huffington Post

By Kate Willson of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists for The Global Climate Change Lobby series:

Industry officials are arriving in droves today to take part in what's being pegged as the seminal global event on climate change. The place is expected to fill with representatives of traditional carbon-intensive industries, like oil and coal. But the first to set up their exhibit booths at the conference center in Copenhagen are largely those whose voices have been drowned out - the people representing wind, solar, and other renewable energy sources.

The Global Wind Energy Council wants the talks to produce targets for emission reductions. "The higher the better, because wind turbines help reduce emissions," says Rune Birk Nielsen, speaking on behalf of the council. For the first time, wind has followed more established industries in coordinating a global message among its member companies.

"We've got almost every large manufacturer in the world, including the Chinese and the Americans," Nielsen boasts. "For the first time you see these companies stick together with the global voice. The message is, 'wind power works.'"

While the wind industry tries to makes itself heard at the UN talks, it's having more success at the national level. "On the UN level it's so blurry -- there are so many delegates and representatives," Nielsen says. "On the national level it's much easier. We know who we want to talk to. They're much more accessible." The countries most receptive to the industry lobby: China, India, Brazil, and the United States -- the very countries so key to achieving a binding agreement at the Copenhagen talks, which conclude Dec. 17.

Pete Gorton, director of the International Solar Energy Society, says his industry can't compete with the cash-backed lobbying of the big carbon emitters. It depends, instead, largely on grassroots advocacy at a national level. "We believe it's effective," he explains. "If we had more money, we could do more. But we're optimistic. I'm paying my own way here. I'm here out of interest."

Watch the exclusive coverage from Copenhagen:



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Special To The Huffington Post By Kate Willson of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists for The Global Climate Change Lobby series: Industry officials are arriving in droves tod...
Special To The Huffington Post By Kate Willson of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists for The Global Climate Change Lobby series: Industry officials are arriving in droves tod...
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notsostimulated
A view right from the middle
10:26 PM on 12/09/2009
I'm for clean energy and a clean planet. Let's keep the hypocrites out of this. Obama is flying to Oslo on a 747 accompanied by military transport aircraft and perhaps decoy 747 only to return home and return to the same part of the world a few days later.
02:24 PM on 12/10/2009
If he is so worried about global warming then why burn the fuel to fly over and back. Nobody talks much about the aircraft that emits CO in the atmoshere .
07:13 PM on 12/09/2009
Thanks to all the clean energy lobbies attending the Copenhagen summit trying to spread the message of the new energy age.

http://www.solarmaid.org

Solar Maid is the largest solar panel cleaning and maintenance company in the nation.
03:06 PM on 12/08/2009
Copenhagen climate summit: 1,200 limos, 140 private planes and caviar wedges.

Nice to see these guys are leading by example.

Why can't they video conference? That's what other companies are doing to conserve.
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fumes
Midnight Toker
03:27 PM on 12/08/2009
didn't you hear..

there will be free hookers for attendees!!

can't tele that lol..
10:55 PM on 12/08/2009
nice one
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
yep yep
03:01 PM on 12/08/2009
A massive transfer of wealth from developed nations to developing nations will ultimately benefit renewable energy industry. Although fosiil fuel companies nad traditional energy companies are fighting hard against a Co2 reduction fund i think there is a good chance that a deal (even a watered down one) will occur. So the renewable industry being shut out is really not a huge deal in my mind.
http://envirogy.wordpress.com
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03:45 PM on 12/08/2009
So massive redistribution of wealth is not a problem for you in your mind?
06:54 PM on 12/08/2009
You have no problem with re-disributing weath to the upper classes through capitalism.
02:07 PM on 12/08/2009
Something smells Right fishy here. The cons have managed to pull a fast one, once again over the Dems and the american people's eyes.
12:08 PM on 12/08/2009
News a week ago addressed the difficulty the proposed mfgr. of wind turbin gears was having trouble getting funding for his project. How do we help him create these jobs and products?
As we look at the initiation of wind and solar power plants, where is the manufacturing plant that will develop the high tech storage "batteries?" This could be a huge industry since our automobiles could use one size, the capturing field could use many huge ones (compete in size with our current gas storage sites), and the "do it yourself" storage for the back-yard turbin or collection panels. Is this stupid dreaming? Look at some of the facilities in Minnesota today. My grand nephews have a wind turbine behind their high school in Buffalo.
All of these ideas could be TARP or JOBS related developments. From designing to manufacturing to installing to servicing jobs would be created. What are we waiting for?
01:08 PM on 12/08/2009
"Is this stupid dreaming?"

Not at all. The clean energy revolution is already underway. Here in Texas, we're beginning to harvest the wind. We have lots of it, both out west and off the Gulf coast. Other states and other countries are doing the same with whatever resources their location provides.

The funny thing is, as the article points out, it's not just a few tree huggers pushing clean energy. It's the free market. Those people who think we should stick with fossil fuels are contradicting market wisdom as well as scientific opinion.
01:29 PM on 12/08/2009
just feed the power back to the grid
11:50 AM on 12/08/2009
If it is so efficient why does it rely on grants to get off of the ground and even more grants to keep going??? Fossil fuels make money straight out of the ground.
12:44 PM on 12/08/2009
Because the fossil fuel producers fight these technologys every step of the way, thats why they need grants
01:24 PM on 12/08/2009
Clean energy requires a massive investment in infrastructure. The money has to come from somewhere to build solar panels, wind turbines, and other types of power plants. Once the infrastructure is built, the systems pay for themselves over the long run.
11:32 AM on 12/08/2009
Solar, wind, geothermal, tidal and other forms of clean and renewable energy can power the entire planet economically. Coal, oil, gas, timber and other fossil fuels are ancient technology which we no longer need.
08:21 AM on 12/09/2009
if that were true we would have already replaced them ...........could it be the cost maybe?