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September 14, 2022 01:44 PM UTC

First Time Doug Lamborn Has Ever Cared About Saving Energy

  • 7 Comments
  • by: Colorado Pols
Rep. Doug Lamborn (R-eefer Madness).

A conservative Georgia news outlet calling itself Georgia Virtue reports on a letter sent this week by Rep. Buddy Carter, co-authored by Colorado’s own Rep. Doug Lamborn, cautioning that the legalization of marijuana could pose “a threat to the U.S. energy grid.”

A Congressman from Georgia spearheaded the initiative to pen a letter to the Biden administration this week, joined by a colleague who says that nationwide marijuana legalization poses a threat to the nation’s energy grid.

Rep. Buddy Carter, a pharmacist from Georgia’s 1st congressional district, wrote the letter with Rep. Doug Lamborn of Colorado. The duo argued that there are “serious concerns regarding the energy and resource-intensive nature of marijuana cultivation.” The letter also said the practice would pose a threat to the nation’s environmental goals.

Addressed to Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm, Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, Energy Information Administration Administrator Joseph DeCarolis, and Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Michael Regan, the letter calls for more research, noting that “marijuana cultivation alone accounts for 1% of nationwide energy consumption and uses twice as much water as maize, soybeans, wheat, and wine grapes.”

It’s one of the more unusual angles we’ve seen “nationwide marijuana legalization” attacked from, a misleading premise to begin with since there is no proposal today to federally legalize marijuana–only to allow states to do so if they choose, which some number will choose not to. Either way you don’t hear Lamborn complaining about the massive amounts of electrical power consumed by cryptocurrency mining, in which just the seven biggest mining companies consume enough electricity to power all the homes in the nation’s fourth-largest city of Houston. But when it comes to resources consumed to produce marijuana, Rep. Lamborn suddenly becomes a born-again treehugging environmentalist!

As Congress debates whether to advance marijuana legalization, the American people must have a better understanding of the environmental costs of this rapidly growing industry. If the Administration seeks to reduce emissions and protect our environment as aggressively as it has previously committed, [Pols emphasis] we must have a comprehensive view of where emissions and other pollution occurs, as they will likely only grow.

So does this mean that Rep. Doug Lamborn supports the Biden administration’s agenda “to reduce emissions and protect our environment as aggressively as it has previously committed?” Given how Lamborn trashed the historic climate provisions in the Inflation Reduction Act, we’re guessing not. The best we can conclude from his record is that Doug Lamborn only cares about protecting the environment from marijuana.

There are a lot of very good reasons to upgrade the nation’s power grid, with growing marijuana far down the list. A future of electric cars parked in every all-electric heated home makes the power used for growing legalized marijuana an afterthought.

And it’s a future we’ll have to achieve without Doug Lamborn’s help.

Comments

7 thoughts on “First Time Doug Lamborn Has Ever Cared About Saving Energy

      1. Does this mean he’ll be supportive of efforts to green the military? Maybe have his installations in CD-5 lead the way? 

        We can (and should) take it from carbon-neutral to regenerative.  Any conversation of agriculture’s role in climate mitigation has been so politically charged for two decades that few substantive policy conversations are ever held. The heads of the largest, right-leaning ag organizations knew we (agriculture) could play a role but they had so poisoned the well with their members that it was a “cooked up lefty plan to destroy ag” they couldn’t take a lead.  Eventually Secretary Vilsack had to hold a meeting in secret with the groups to get the policy discussions underway. 

        That’s where we are  We clearly have the tools and technology to play a significant role, and like the virtues of renewable energy to our rural economies, they’re finally coming to the table (20 years late). 

         

    1. You really have no concept of, well, anything do you, nutlid.

      What Spaceman said.  We want everything to be carbon neutral.  We're criticizing Lamebrain, because he says something about it now.  But doesn't seem to care in any other instance.

          1. Everyone but Captain Clueless!  In the days when we were legalizing industrial hemp we managed to get the entire CO delegation onboard one of our early attempts in the House,  sans Lamborn..  He was convinced that industrial hemp was marijuana and  no amount of information was going to change his mind. 

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