Times have changed since the Wall Street Journal held its first
“ECO:nomics—Creating Environmental Capital” conference at the
super-swanky Bacara Resort in Santa Barbara. I was there in 2008 (but,
alas, stayed at the Best Western in downtown Santa Barbara) when several
hundred investors and corporate CEOs listened to leading crony
capitalists, including Jeff Immelt of GE, James Rogers of Duke Energy,
Andrew Liveris of Dow Chemical, and John Doerr of Kleiner, Perkins,
Caulfield and Byers (where Al Gore was also a partner), smugly explain
how they were going to strike it rich off the backs of consumers and
taxpayers with green energy subsidies and mandates, federal loan
guarantees, and the higher energy prices that would make renewable
energy competitive with coal, oil, and natural gas once cap-and-trade
was enacted.
This year’s sixth annual conference, which I didn’t attend, was also
held at the Bacara Resort, but the mood was apparently different.
Yesterday, the Journal ran a six-page supplement that summarized the
conference’s highlights. The lead article
by John Bussey was headlined: “Green Investing: So Much Promise, So
Little Return: At The Wall Street Journal’s ECO:nomics conference, the
talk was about all the innovations taking place in renewable energy—and
about all the investors who are losing interest.”
READ MORE: http://www.globalwarming.org/2013/03/27/wall-street-journals-crony-capitalist-conference-turns-sour/
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