Political Hotsheet
March 19, 2009 2:40 PM

Obama Announces $2.4 Billion To Encourage Electric Vehicle Production

(CBS)
After touring the Edison Electric Vehicle Technical Center in Pomona, California today, President Obama announced an outlay of $2.4 billion is stimulus funds meant to encourage the production of next generation plug-in hybrid electric vehicles and advanced battery components for such vehicles.

“I am announcing that the Department of Energy is launching a $2 billion competitive grant program under the Recovery Act that will spark the manufacturing of the batteries and parts that run these cars, build or upgrade the factories that will produce them, and in the process, create thousands of jobs right here in America,” the president said.

He added that the government is “making a $400 million down-payment on the infrastructure necessary to get these cars on the road; and because these cars won’t leave the showroom unless consumers buy them, the Recovery Act includes a new tax credit of $7,500 to encourage Americans to plug one in at home.”

“Show us that your idea or your company is best-suited to meet America’s challenges, and we will give you a chance to prove it,” the president said, adding that “every company that wants a shot at these tax dollars has to prove their worth.”

The president’s full remarks, as prepared for delivery, are below. He opened with a joke about how it’s “always nice to get out of Washington for a little while and recharge your batteries.”

PRESIDENT OBAMA: It is good to be back in California. It’s always nice to get out of Washington for a little while and recharge your batteries. You know a little bit about that here. And I want to thank the folks here at the Electric Vehicle Technical Center for the tour we just had.

Yesterday, I was in Costa Mesa talking with folks about this economic downturn we’re in – a downturn that’s hitting this state as much as any. One in ten Californians are out of work and actively looking for jobs. And the foreclosure crisis has had a devastating impact on Southern California in particular. But Californians aren’t just bearing the brunt of this crisis – you’re doing what needs to be done to overcome it.

This workshop is a perfect example of that. Day by day, test by test, trial by painstaking trial; the scientists, engineers, and workers at this site are developing the ideas and innovations that our future depend upon. It is your ingenuity that will help create the new jobs and new industries of tomorrow.

It isn’t easy. There are days, I’m sure, when progress seems fleeting, and days when it feels like you’re making no progress at all. But often, our greatest discoveries are born not in a flash of brilliance, but in the crucible of a deliberate effort over time. And often, they take something more than imagination and dedication alone – often they take an investment from government. That’s how we sent a man to the moon. That’s how we were able to launch a world wide web. And it’s how we’ll build the clean energy economy that’s the key to our competitiveness in the 21st century.

We’ll do this because we know that the nation that leads on energy will be the nation that leads the world in the 21st century. That’s why, around the world, nations are racing to lead in these industries of the future. Germany is leading the world in solar power. Spain generates almost 30 percent of its power by harnessing the wind, while we manage less than one percent. And Japan is producing the batteries that currently power American hybrid cars.

So the problem isn’t a lack of technology. You’re producing the technology right here. The problem is that, for decades, we have avoided doing what must be done as a nation to turn challenge into opportunity. As a consequence, we import more oil today than we did on 9/11. The 1908 Model T earned better gas mileage than a typical SUV sold in 2008. And even as our economy has been transformed by new forms of technology, our electric grid looks largely the same as it did half a century ago.

So we have a choice to make. We can remain one of the world’s leading importers of foreign oil, or we can make the investments that will allow us to become the world’s leading exporter of renewable energy. We can let climate change continue to go unchecked, or we can help stem it. We can let the jobs of tomorrow be created abroad, or we can create those jobs right here in America and lay the foundation for our lasting prosperity.

That is what my recovery plan does. It will create or save 3.5 million jobs – nearly 400,000 of them right here in California – in part by making investments in areas critical to our long-term growth.

And that is the forward-thinking purpose of the budget I have submitted to Congress. It’s a budget that makes hard choices about where to save and where to spend; that makes overdue investments in education, health care, and yes, energy – investments that will catalyze innovation and industry, creating green jobs and launching clean, renewable energy companies right here in California.

In the next three years, we will double this nation’s supply of renewable energy. We have also made the largest investment in basic research funding in American history – an investment that will spur not only new discoveries in energy, but breakthroughs in science and technology.

We will invest fifteen billion dollars a year to develop technologies like wind power and solar power; advanced biofuels, clean coal, and more fuel-efficient cars and trucks that are built right here in America.

We will soon lay down thousands of miles of power lines that can carry new energy to cities and towns across this country. We will put Americans to work making our homes and buildings more efficient so that we can save billions of dollars on our energy bills, just like you’ve done in California for decades. And we will put one million plug-in hybrid vehicles on America’s roads by 2015.

Because these cars of tomorrow require the batteries of tomorrow, I am announcing that the Department of Energy is launching a $2 billion competitive grant program under the Recovery Act that will spark the manufacturing of the batteries and parts that run these cars, build or upgrade the factories that will produce them, and in the process, create thousands of jobs right here in America.

Show us that your idea or your company is best-suited to meet America’s challenges, and we will give you a chance to prove it. And just because I’m here today doesn’t exempt all of you from that challenge – every company that wants a shot at these tax dollars has to prove their worth.

We are also making a $400 million down-payment on the infrastructure necessary to get these cars on the road; and because these cars won’t leave the showroom unless consumers buy them, the Recovery Act includes a new tax credit of $7,500 to encourage Americans to plug one in at home.

True to form, California has already forged ahead with its own plans rather than wait for Washington. It’s fitting that the state home to the first freeway and the first gas station is already at work devising the next freeway and the next gas station. This “green freeway” you’re planning with Oregon and Washington would link your states with a network of rest stops that allow you to do more than just grab a cup of coffee; but also charge your car, refuel it with hydrogen or biofuels, or swap out a battery in the time it takes to fill a gas tank. Charging stations have begun to pop up around downtown San Francisco, and that city has joined with San Jose and Oakland with the vision of becoming the “electric vehicle capital of the United States.”

Here at Southern California Edison, and all across the country, in factories and laboratories, at the Big Three and at small startups, these innovations are taking place right now. In Michigan, and Ohio, and right here in California, we are seeing exciting developments in this field as hardworking men and women are already laying the groundwork for this new industry. Even as our American automakers are undergoing a painful recalibration, they are retooling and reimagining themselves into an industry that can compete and win, because millions of jobs depend on it.

This is the critical work you’re doing. But it’s just one component of what must be a comprehensive energy plan. That’s why we are making an $11 billion investment in upgrading our power grid, so that it can carry renewable energy from the far-flung places that harness or produce it to the cities that use it. That’s why we will create jobs retrofitting millions of homes and cutting energy use in federal buildings by one quarter, saving the American taxpayer $1.5 billion each year.

These are challenging times, but we know we can do this. It won’t come without cost, nor will it be easy. We’ve got 240 million cars already on the road. We’ve got to upgrade the world’s largest energy grid while it’s already in use. And other countries aren’t standing around and waiting for us; they are forging ahead with their own bold energy plans.

But we have faced tough challenges before. And at our best, we have never relied on hope and chance alone. Time and again, we have tapped those great American resources: industriousness and ingenuity. That, after all, is what California is all about. This is a state that has always drawn people who’ve had their eyes set on the horizon; who’ve always dreamed of a future that others thought beyond reach. That is the spirit that you are reclaiming here at the Electric Vehicle Test Center, and that is the spirit we need to reclaim all across this country. Thank you.
Tags:
obama ,
batteries ,
california ,
electric vehicles
Topics:
Energy
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by mswift1 March 26, 2009 12:56 PM EDT
The plan outlined by Obama will take over 1,437 years to ensure that each of the current 240 million cars on the road are powered by non-poluting means. Remember he said it would take 6 years or until 2015 to have 1 million cars on the road so that is only 167,000 cars per year.

I don't know about you but I believe 1,437 years is WAY TOO LONG!

The foundation of the plan is sound but it needs a massive injection of steroids if it is to have a meaningfull impact on the problems of polution and energy independence.
Reply to this comment
by sjc_1 March 24, 2009 11:13 PM EDT
"Where's the spirit of innovation and invention that built this nation?!?!"

It is stuck waiting for the big money to trickle down to get all this started.
Reply to this comment
by cbsnewscomme March 20, 2009 7:08 AM EDT
http://my.nowpublic.com/world/my-car-wind-generator-car
Reply to this comment
by cbsnewscomme March 20, 2009 7:05 AM EDT
I really laugh to myself when I see so many putting money into these big wind farms, and making their home made wind turbines out of PVC tubing, or plastic barrels. In fact all you need to do is pull out your old fan in the closet, set it in the window and let the breeze come in to make electricity from it. Hook your fan into a battery system, and you are reducing global warming, a you don't need to have T.Boone a Pickins your wallet...

FAN POWER America....get it out and use it.
djermano@yahoo.com
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by DefendLiberty March 19, 2009 5:49 PM EDT
Another refreshing change from the OIL MEN in the BUSHIE/GOP who never could see past EXXON PROFITS. Now we have a President with the foresight to head the country toward energy independence while helping preserve the environment. Of course the BUSH/GOP PARROTS will SQUAWK because the OIL-FUNDED GOP will not do as well. So what?
Reply to this comment
by hungry1968-15 March 19, 2009 5:32 PM EDT
Where do people like you come from?

Yours is the attitude of failure!

You and those like you need to simply get out of the way!!
Posted by iam4honesty at 2:27 PM : Mar 19, 2009





Well said!!!

Where's the spirit of innovation and invention that built this nation?!?!
Reply to this comment
by hungry1968-15 March 19, 2009 5:28 PM EDT
And what wind farms...a few wind turbines in West Texas, where the neighbors are throwing hissy fits because they don't want to see wind turbines on their horizon?

Please find me some nice pictures of all these wind turbines and solar panels, sir?
Posted by Rowdy99 at 2:20 PM : Mar 19, 2009




If you treasonous Texas ---holes, would rather ship your money to terrorist supporting nations, rather than looking at some windmills, then might I suggest that you join Haliburton and Cheney in Dubai?


And anytime that you want you can go to google and enter "wind farms", then click "images". It's pretty simple really, and I shouldn't have to explain it to you.

By the way, NO COAL MINER has ever died because of a wind farm, the money they generate doesn't go to nation's that sponsor terrorism, and they don't produce any toxic greenhouse gases. And on top of that, they generate enough energy to pay for themselves in 11 years, and they have a life span of 25 - 30 years, which means they are PROFITABLE over the long term!!!
Reply to this comment
by iam4honesty March 19, 2009 5:27 PM EDT
Where do people like you come from?

Yours is the attitude of failure!

You and those like you need to simply get out of the way!!
Reply to this comment
by Rowdy99 March 19, 2009 5:20 PM EDT
What windfarms and solara panels?

The average family cannot afford $70,000 worth of solar panels...and where are you going to get the material to make them? Import it from some other country? Mine it here...you really think you'll get that past the greenie weenies?

And what wind farms...a few wind turbines in West Texas, where the neighbors are throwing hissy fits because they don't want to see wind turbines on their horizon?

Please find me some nice pictures of all these wind turbines and solar panels, sir?
Reply to this comment
by hungry1968-15 March 19, 2009 5:14 PM EDT
If you want to "clean up the environment", don't look to electric cars as an answer. Remember, the electricity has to come from somewhere, and, the most common source is coal fired power plants. So you burn coal, a much dirtier fuel than gasoline, you lose lots of power due to energy conversion inefficiencies and power transmission losses, and all you see is no smoke coming out of the exhaust pipe. Well the smoke still gets made. It just gets made somewhere else. And the quantities of smoke are MUCH greater than just burning the gasoline.
Posted by omded at 1:24 PM : Mar 19, 2009





You haven't noticed the solar panels and wind farms sprouting up all over the country?

Those aren't there just because they look good, ya know.
Reply to this comment
by cdegolier March 19, 2009 5:03 PM EDT
I've always been curious as to where all the electricity is going to come from if everyone drives an electric car?
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by fiberglass3 March 19, 2009 4:25 PM EDT
Posted by blazercoach1
people were choosing to NOT buy hybrid cars.


Or any cars for that matter !
The problem is that hybrids are only part of the answer. They are not plug in yet and still depend on a gasoline driven engine. A larger battery, plug-in technology, better batteries and capicators and 100 plus miles to the gallon
will bring out the future car buyers.
Reply to this comment
by omded March 19, 2009 4:24 PM EDT
If you want to "clean up the environment", don't look to electric cars as an answer. Remember, the electricity has to come from somewhere, and, the most common source is coal fired power plants. So you burn coal, a much dirtier fuel than gasoline, you lose lots of power due to energy conversion inefficiencies and power transmission losses, and all you see is no smoke coming out of the exhaust pipe. Well the smoke still gets made. It just gets made somewhere else. And the quantities of smoke are MUCH greater than just burning the gasoline.
Reply to this comment
by blazercoach1 March 19, 2009 3:42 PM EDT
If it's such a great idea, and if it's such a better product, why does it NEED to be subsidized? Why wouldn't Americans just be lining up to buy this wonderfully cheap and excellent product?

Just earlier this week wasn't there an article on this very website about how people were choosing to NOT buy hybrid cars because of the hassle?

Come on America.........let's either make this worth our time and money........or let it go the way of ethanol...
Reply to this comment
by mattcat25 March 19, 2009 3:20 PM EDT
It?s been years belated, someone finally has the forte to flip the switch and turn on the light of progress.
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