March 6, 2010
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
Dearly beloved, we are gathered here today to bid farewell to a legend, one whose demise has been recorded around the world; such was the impact of this icon. One of massive strength, it left behind a vast mark – some would say gash – on our planet.
General Motors' Hummer has died. But it will continue to spew its fumes – and spread global warmth – for years to come. The Hummer was born in 1992, the offspring of an M1A1 Abrams tank and – it is rumored –Beelzebub. Too big for its garage, it was raised in a driveway in Kokomo, Indiana. Eventually, it moved to the wide-open spaces of Scarsdale, N.Y. But throughout its life, it was misunderstood, got no respect, and often not enough gas.
http://www.livingonearth.org/shows/segments.htm?programID=10-P13-00010&segmentID=6
Listen to the eulogy.
A version of this also appeared on the Huffington Post.
Jan. 12, 2010
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
As General Motors faces the prospect of a fourth CEO in a year, there is good news and bad news about the iconic company. The good news is it has survived years of mismanagement, Hummers and other gas guzzlers. The bad news? We, the American people, own it.
Take a look in the executive suites, home for years to the folks who drove GM over a cliff. Steven Rattner, President Barack Obama's "car czar," said they "could not be allowed to continue after burning through $34 billion in cash in barely a year."
And perhaps they won't. For starters, there's a new acting CEO, Edward E. Whitacre Jr.
Moving belatedly into the 21st century, General Motors now has...
Dec. 3, 2009
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
In Copenhagen, a major binding agreement at the global warming summit is not to be. Not this year. In Washington, the Senate is so divided that it became clear months ago that climate legislation will be pushed off until 2010 at the earliest.
Still, the United States can meet the challenge of a world demanding that it take the lead on global warming. Here’s how:
Using his executive authority, President Barack Obama can instruct power plants to ....
www.truthdig.com/report/item/obama_on_his_own_20091203/
(This commentary was cross-posted at Truthout.org and the Huffington Post.)

Nov. 27, 2009
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
Everyone knows that $4-a-gallon gasoline in 2008 finally led Americans to abandon their gas guzzlers and start buying gas sippers. Everyone is wrong.
According to a new report released with little fanfare by the Environmental Protection Agency, Americans bought vehicles in 2008 that averaged only 0.4 miles per gallon better than a year earlier, when gas cost nearly 50 cents less.
Yes, some car buyers looked for ways to drive cheaper. Some dealers ran out of highly efficient hybrids. And many gas guzzlers sat ignored on dealers' lots.
But the price of gas -- which had been increasing every year since 2002 -- wasn't enough to significantly alter the fleetwide fuel economy...
(A version of this Op-Ed commentary appeared in the Baltimore Sun).
Nov. 13, 2009
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
WASHINGTON -- The Copenhagen global warming summit is less than a month away, with major agreement far from certain. The U.S. Senate is so riven that President Barack Obama's top climate aide says legislation will be pushed off until 2010 at the earliest. Still, Washington can meet the challenge of a world demanding that it finally take the lead on global warming. Here's how:
Using his executive authority, Mr. Obama can instruct power plants to burn cleaner fuels, order new efficiency standards to reduce the energy used by consumer and commercial appliances, and help the world's least-developed nations use solar power -- rather than heavily polluting wood fires -- for cooking.
If he does these things, he would...
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09317/1013069-109.stm
Oct. 2, 2009
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
President Barack Obama's new clean car standard is the biggest single step the United States has taken to curb global warming and ease our oil addiction. It demonstrates to the world that the United States is finally confronting the threat of global warming.
This fuel-economy measure is necessary because the world's leading scientists agree we must cut pollution to reduce climbing temperatures.
You don't care about global warming? Maybe you care about our addiction to uncertain supplies of foreign oil. Driving cars that get 35.5 mpg — the average set out in the new mileage requirement — rather than the current average of 25 mpg will cut our oil imports. The Union of Concerned Scientists estimates the reduction will save nearly the equivalent of the oil we buy from Saudi Arabia each year.
The new standard can be achieved without compromising safety...
www.tennessean.com/article/20091002/OPINION01/910020334/1007/
July 14
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
Is the new "cash for clunkers" law really a vehicle for replacing gas-guzzling cars and trucks with the next generation of clean, green machines - or is it just a pretext for moving slightly less thirsty guzzlers from dealers' lots onto America's driveways?
If the federal agency with the mission of overseeing the law does its job well, we'll find out quickly - and well before the automakers show up again on Capitol Hill, tin cup in hand, asking Congress this question from Dickens' Oliver Twist, updated for 2009: "Please, sirs, may we have some more billions?"
Sadly, the law is, in fact, weighted heavily in favor of car makers looking to unload...
www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/oped/bal-op.clunkers14jul14,0,954634.story
(A version of this Op-Ed commentary also appeared in The Miami Herald, the Star-Ledger of Newark, N.J., the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, the Portland Oregonian's OregonLive.com, the Richmond Times-Dispatch, and the San Francisco Chronicle.)
July 10, 2009
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
Carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas, does its heat trapping damage for over 100 years and accumulates in the atmosphere. So the G-8's imitation of Nero will bring....
www.politico.com/arena/archive/life-as-we-know-it.html
June 26, 2009
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
The bill's renewable energy provisions fall far short of technology can provide. The requirement for the cleaner coal plants wouldn't take effect until 2025-and that technology doesn't exist. And the bill revokes EPA's authority to regulate carbon dioxide emissions from coal plants. That's a step backwards. ...
June 20-21, 2009
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
On climate change, “decisions made now will determine whether we get big changes or small ones.” So said the administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Jane Lubchenco this week.
The Obama Administration had just made public on Tuesday its report on the anticipated impact of global warming...
www.politico.com/arena/perm/Daniel_F__Becker_1E68B52F-3541-4472-822B-DC6A4D88A1EE.html
June 14, 2009
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
OK, California. Please do it again.
Seven years after the state paved the way with major cuts in global warming pollution from automobiles, President Barack Obama ordered up similar progress for the nation's entire fleet. Now it is time for California to lead the country to the next big thing: Kicking the gasoline habit...
www.sacbee.com/opinion/story/1942963.html
May 17, 2009
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
The automakers are filling up again at the Capitol Hill bailout pump. The latest idea is "cash for clunkers."
Interested in junking your old gas-guzzling Hummer -- or maybe Lincoln Town Car or Chevy Blazer -- for a new vehicle?
If the gas mileage of any 2009 model passenger car you buy is just 4 miles per gallon better than the one you are now driving, you could pick up $3,500 from taxpayers...
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-gersten17-2009may17,0,7529928.story
April 30, 2009
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
Should taxpayers subsidize the sale of 18-mile-per-gallon SUVs?
That is the question at the heart of a still-quiet but heated debate that is likely to flare into full view in Congress in coming weeks. It brings together two issues at the intersection of ...
www.huffingtonpost.com/dan-becker-and-james-gerstenzang/want-tailfins-with-that_b_194106.html
April 29, 2009
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
Gone are GM's rhetoric echoing in the Oval Office, Exxon's denial of science, and Dick Cheney's years of inaction. When it comes to fighting global warming, President Obama has swept them all away in his first 100 days in office.
He has put a new and proper reliance on science. He has named dedicated environmentalists to key positions within the White House, at the Environmental Protection Agency and at the Energy Department. And he has unveiled substantial measures to directly tackle climate change.
Perhaps nothing the president has done so far will on its own reduce heat-trapping carbon dioxide, the key greenhouse gas. It's only been 100 days. But he has...
www.huffingtonpost.com/dan-becker-and-james-gerstenzang/obama-clearing-the-air-in_b_192542.html
April 25, 2009
By Daniel F. Becker and James Gerstenzang
First, he can...
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/25/opinion/25becker.html?_r=1&ref=opinion
March 31, 2009
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
Unveiling his far-reaching auto plan, President Obama gave a nod to a little-noticed movement in Congress to clear the roads of gas-guzzling clunkers best destined for the crusher.
It's an attractive idea. Think of it as: "Get the Jalopies off the Road."
The theory is simple enough: Reward owners for junking older-model fuel-slurping cars and light trucks and buying new "clean" vehicles that will use less fuel and release less carbon, the key culprit in global warming.
If done right, it delivers two benefits central to the president's goals. It would stimulate the sale of new vehicles and help fight global warming and other air pollution. If done poorly...
March 31, 2009
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
As part of their turnaround plans, General Motors and Chrysler delivered bold promises: Clean cars, clean fuels and more hybrids.
But the Obama administration found the plans lacking and sent the two automakers back to the drawing boards. This leads to the questions..
March 24, 2009
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
Four minutes after midnight on March 24, 1989, the Exxon Valdez went aground on the Bligh Reef in Alaska's Prince William Sound, fouling beaches, killing thousands of sea otters, bald eagles and other wildlife—and sinking the reputation of an oil industry already wracked by ecological disaster.
The 10.8-million-gallon oil spill was not the biggest up to that point. There have been larger since. But in that grinding, steel-against-shoal instant, it became emblematic of all...
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-oped0324spillmar24,0,3043365.story
February 18, 2009
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
After receiving billions of dollars in taxpayer-funded bailouts over the last few months, General Motors and Chrysler returned to Washington on Tuesday to shake their chrome-plated tin cups again.
In addition to begging for billions more in bailout funds, the automakers...
www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-gerstenzang18-2009feb18,0,730300.story
January 26, 2009
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
Let's give a cheer for President Obama's order Monday that his Environmental Protection Agency reconsider President Bush's rejection of the request by California and 13 other states to write their own rules on greenhouse gas emissions. Clearly, they will be tougher than anything the Federal government has produced.
On his fifth full day in office...
www.huffingtonpost.com/dan-becker-and-james-gerstenzang/president-obama-on-global_b_161005.html
January 9, 2009
By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang
In a little-noticed decision, the Bush administration this week slammed the environmental door -- walking away from what could have been its most far-reaching measure to cool a warming climate while heating up a frozen economy.
With the same stroke, President Bush handed...
www.huffingtonpost.com/dan-becker-and-james-gerstenzang/bush-blowing-global-warmi_b_156760.html
October 17, 2008
By Dan Becker
While the nation's attention was focused on that other bailout, Congress and the President awarded automakers $25 billion in taxpayer-subsidized loan guarantees. The money is supposed to pay for up to 30% of the costs of retooling factories to make vehicles that get at least 25% better gas mileage than similar cars.
But this auto industry salvage package lacks...
www.huffingtonpost.com/dan-becker/the-brother-in-law-of-all_b_135701.htmll