Here are at least two (so far) that catch my eye:
1) upgrade all existing buildings in the US. Who pays for that? The owners? Will there be a penalty for not doing so? Will this involve legislature, or will they offer incentives to upgrade? This seems to be an unrealistic goal written by someone who has a limited view of the realities of flyover country.
That's already been happening in many places for one very simple reason. The energy grid, both electric AND gas, can't keep up otherwise.
Try being realistic about this, wouldja? It's clearly going to start with mandating better standards for NEW construction, THEN LATER it will get around to existing construction and with the way politics works at local levels (this IS a LOCAL MATTER!!) much of it will be defined by incentives, as it usually is.
So, in the end, we don't really have a choice unless you enjoy brownouts, blackouts, gas shortages, heating oil shortages, spikes, etc.
And much of it happens at the state and local level. GND mechanisms will ultimately seek to make it advantageous to states to help this along.
It has never ever happened any other way.
2) all of the proposed government investment in green initiatives. I understand why, but I do not agree that central government should be taking money from others to give to certain sectors of our economy. As stated elsewhere, I am a small government fiscal conservative, and this reeks of corporate welfare.
What are you even talking about?? In the turn of the century (20th) government did exactly that for the petroleum industry.
And AGAIN, it's not like they had much of a choice in the other direction!
Kerosene was clearly superior to WHALE OIL for lighting, and we were running out of whales!
Petroleum was superior to:
Alcohol, primitive battery electric, peanut oil, etc.
Together with the free market the ultimate choice got hammered out. Do you honestly think that the government "takes money from others"?
What nonsense...the government does what it did in the 1900's, it gives a hand to fledgling alternatives that prove they have a bright future, and there are gambles to be taken. Just discovering a few oil wells in Pennsylvania wasn't a guarantee that this petroleum stuff was going to be everywhere.
We have an opportunity to become world leaders in electric cars. Hey brother, like it or not, the major manufacturers are gearing up for it right now.
It is going to happen as sure as the nose on your face....
ALL OVER THE ENTIRE WORLD.
Are you saying that we alone should stand down and say
"Screw what the rest of the world is doing, we're gonna stay away from that market!" ??
GOOD LUCK, go tell
GM, FORD, CHRYSLER, VOLVO, AUDI, MBZ, KIA, NISSAN, TOYOTA, LANCIA, PORSCHE, PEUGEOT...I think there are more but gimme a second...
Oh wait, I don't think Mahindra plans to go electric. They make those little teensy weensy tin can cars in India, the ones powered by a 250cc moped engine.