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E1A Essay Quiz 1 Sept 30 – Sample Student Answers QUESTION In your opinion, why does Bill Gates call for an “Energy Miracle”—and not just an “Energy Solution”—in his 2016 Annual Letter? In your personal opinion as a reader, does Gates’ choice of the word “miracle” make his overall argument more (or less) convincing? Why? Support your answer with plenty of brief quotes and examples from Gates’ letter. ANSWER #1 In my opinion, Gates calls for an "Energy Miracle" in his 2016 Annual Letter because he is realistic about the magnitude of reducing carbon emissions to zero but is not allowing the size of the issue to be an excuse for inaction. His use of the term miracle rather than solution communicates to me an attractive honesty. He is not sugarcoating the sobering facts about climate change, and his use streamlined mathematical equation at once both summarizes the energy crisis and demands a a miracle. The 2015 statistic that the world emitted 36 billion tons of carbon dioxide to produce energy was particularly effective in illustrating urgency. "It’s worth remembering, because it will come in handy... someone may tell you they know how to remove 100 million tons of carbon per year. That sounds like a lot, but if you do the math—100 million divided by 36 billion—you’ll see that they’re talking about 0.3 percent of the problem". As a reader, he is not letting me get away from the reality of facts. Climate change is not a passive, unwelcome guest that a quick fix solution can do away with. It is a skulking and life-threatening behemoth that will require effective collaboration, time, and creativity on the borderline of crazy to tackle. In a word, an energy "miracle". It has become common today particularly among my generation to dismiss the possibility of miracles. Gates' use of the word miracle in his argument compels me with the power of hope combined with the power of focused hard work. I am drawn to his argument, because I am drawn to the audacity of his expectation to see a miracle manifest. It's a word that challenges me to broaden my perspective and to turn my eyes away from inward dwelling or naval gazing, and towards participation in a greater vision. "I’ve seen miracles happen before. The personal computer. The Internet. The polio vaccine. None of them happened by chance. They are the result of research and development and the human capacity to innovate". Ultimately, Gates is not daunted by the monstrous issue of climate change, and he invites me as a reader into his anticipation of a miracle. Though it took 40 decades for oil to go from being 5 percent to 25 percent of the world's energy supply, Gates is so optimistic that he makes this prediction: "Within the next 15 years—and especially if young people get involved—I expect the world will discover a clean energy breakthrough that will save our planet and power our world". ANSWER #2: Note: This answer contains some truly impressive background research, but lacks a brief preview of the entire answer right up front in paragraph one. QUESTION In your opinion, why does Bill Gates call for an “Energy Miracle”—and not just an “Energy Solution”—in his 2016 Annual Letter? In your personal opinion as a reader, does Gates’ choice of the word “miracle” make his overall argument more (or less) convincing? Why? Support your answer with plenty of brief quotes and examples from Gates’ letter. " In short, we need an energy miracle."- In his 2016 annual letter, Bill Gates attempts to respond to a question uttered by some "high school students in Kentucky" about what "superpower" he wished he had. In response Mr. Gates stated that he wished to have "more energy" and proceeds to explain this statement in a lengthy essay forming a section of this annual letter. He begins by calling on all his readers to "imagine, for a minute, life without energy," evoking a sense of empathy within us for the "1.3 billion people" who have yet to "access" this "miracle." Following this, Mr. Gates utters a very noble statement that he wishes to "help the poorest people" "find a cheap, clean source of energy" in order to improve their lives, reasoning that throughout "history" much of life's delights have been made possible by the availability of "energy." Unfortunately, Mr.Gates hopes to "transform the lives of millions" by making "energy" accessible to all clashes with the evergrowing concern of climate change. Currently, the vast majority of the Earth's energy is derived from the combustion of fossil fuel, all of which produce the unwanted side-effect of increasing the levels of "CO2" in the atmosphere thus propagating the incidence of global warming. Recognizing this dilemma, Mr. Gates sums up the crux of his passage, stating that we would need an "energy miracle"; a way of providing energy without unwanted bonus of CO2 , the solution to which he believes lies in the advancement of technology. [Good summary but you have not yet begun to answer my question...] Google defines a solution as "a means of solving a problem or a difficult situation" whilst claiming that a "miracle" meant an "improbable development" with "welcome consequences". I certainly, believe that the use of the word "miracle" takes away from the overall impact of Mr. Gates' essay. [OK now you answered it, but you need to preview/list briefly the main reasons you feel it "takes away" from his argument.] I, personally believe that Mr. Gates' solution to climate change, although noble, places far too great of an emphasis on technology. In the words of Duncan Green, the strategic adviser of Oxfam GB, Mr.Gates' annual letter "offers" a "technocrat's charter- a parallel universe in which new tech will solve ill health, climate change, illiteracy and just about everything else." With an exuberant sense of optimism Mr.Gates even proceeds to predict that within "15 years" " the world will discover a clean energy breakthrough" that is capable of saving this planet. On my part, I believe this to be an excessive amount of positivism, completely ignorant of the roles which factors like domestic politics, the conditions of the states and of its citizens plays in the development of a country. As Mr. Green would say "is it OK to airbrush out the messiness of real developing countries, turning them into an imaginary peaceful, low income recipients of technology?" I believe that it is not, and Mr. Gates oversimplification of the matter could very much be the thing which prompts the failure of his ideas. [Wow nice job with background research! That's an extremely pointed and poignant critique!] In 2015, Bill Gates' annual letter states his incentives to use science and technology to improve access to vaccines, it was widely criticized as being far too idealistic and simplistic. David McCoy, a public health researcher a the University of London, claims that there has been "very little" in the way of any "independent evolution" towards achieving Mr. Gates' aims. Mr. McCoy's statements emphasizes the difficulties of achieving any significant progress in any department if this progress were to rely on a single propellant, in this case technology. It appears far too trusting Mr. Gates to believe that "his foundation" with its solely "technological style of addressing" (Yojana Sharma, writer at scidev.net) matters can be expected to account for a global solution. Relying completely on technology or science to come up with these life-changing "breakthroughs" is a recipe for disaster, or at least a very slow road to a solution. This is a statement that Mr. Gates himself had confirmed in October 2015 when he stated that he "was pretty naive" in terms of calculating "'how long" the "process" of solving a global issue would take through the means of an "invention". So, is it right for Mr. Gates to cheerfully predict a paradigm shifting "invention" to occur within the next "15 years"? In my opinion, this time frame appears to be too narrow, and I am skeptical that a single discovery in technology could bring about the major change of bringing the world's CO2 emissin rates down from "36 billion tons" to "zero". Although I do understand the origins of Mr. Gates faith towards technology, having witnessed the growth of the "internet", I do believe that this faith is morphing into something quite blinded from reality. Looking back at his preceeding annual letters it is obvious that Mr. Gates has maintained the same structure to his essays. Like last year when he started with a general illustration of the problem of health, leading up to a solution related to vaccinations before then proceeding to a call of action in which he encourages people to have a continued and unwavering faith that science will deliver a miraculous solution to this health epidemic within a limited time frame. This is very similar to what Mr.Gates is doing in his "More Energy" essay, except now he urges us to place our faith in technology. I believe, that in this respect, Mr. Gates has failed to learn from his foundation's "history" or being to reliant on a single facet of education to deliver a solution. With his plethora of experience shouldn't he be abandoning this method bound to fail? In conclusion, I believe that deep within his heart, Mr. Gates realizes the improbability of an epic discovery being made alone through technology, and that is why he has chosen to use the word "miracle". I do believe that his choice of this description has made his argument far less convincing and points towards his inability to see the shortcomings of the method he chooses to solve these global problems. [So all you really need to do is "flip the essay" to put this succinct statement of the problem right up front] This essay presents a detailed and creative critique of Gates’ position. That said, I’d prefer the “main answer” appear immediately in paragraph one, instead of waiting until paragraph #2. In my opinion, Bill Gates calls for an “Energy Miracle” and not just an “Energy Solution” to emphasize the magnitude of the challenge that finding a solution would be. As he himself admits, “The challenge we face is big, perhaps bigger than many people imagine.” Furthermore, due to the fact that every day more and more CO2 is being released into the environment, he warns that “time is not on our side.” As such, merely calling for an “Energy Solution” would not adequately convey the gravity of the situation or just how difficult it would be to find a solution. Indeed, discovering a solution within the time frame that we have – “by the end of this century” – would be nothing short of an “Energy Miracle.” However, in my personal opinion as a reader, I feel that by using the term “miracle” in his letter, weakens his overall argument by making it seem out of reach. To be sure, he specifies that when he says “miracle,” he does not mean “something that’s impossible” because he has “seen miracles happen before.” He goes on to list the personal computer, the internet, and the vaccine for polio, and explains that they were not inventions by chance but rather “the result of research and development and the human capacity to innovate.” But that has little to do with the possibility, let alone plausibility, of “miracles.” Of the three examples that he gave, only the polio vaccine was created under time pressure and a pressing need for an immediate solution. Both the internet and the personal computer, while certainly being marvelous inventions that greatly improved the standard of living in our world, were not answers to problems that, if unsolved, would result in a catastrophic consequence. Had the internet and the personal computer only been invented decades later than they were, humanity as a whole would simply have advanced more slowly. There was no sense of urgency for those inventions, unlike the CO2 problem. [That's a very creative and smart critique!] Furthermore, he claims that reducing CO2 emissions by half – something that we do not even currently have a solution to – “wouldn’t be enough… No, we need to get all the way down to zero.” He also admits that “energy research and the transition to new energy sources takes a long time. It took four decades for oil to go from 5 percent of the world’s energy supply to 25 percent.” And that was for something that already existed, not something that had yet to be discovered! Yet, in spite of this, he goes on to make an incredulous prediction that “Within the next 15 years… I expect the world will discover a clean energy breakthrough that will save our planet and power our world” – a bold but sadly unconvincing statement that is backed up by poor little other than sheer optimism. In fact, even if what he says is true, the fact that “Governments have a big role to play” makes his optimism even more puzzling. Gates seems to be completely taking for granted the fact that the governments of other nations share the goals of the U.S. in this endeavor. [...or that the U.S. Government shares this goal in any serious way either.] Yet again another belief that seems to be completely grounded in fantasy, as he does not bring any examples to indicate that the governments of those nations would be onboard with such a major overhaul to their infrastructures and national budgets. None of this even begins to address the issue that there are many countries in the world whose economies depend largely on the profits from oil exports and natural resources. Would they be onboard with a project that would likely hurt them financially and cause them to lose their clout on the world stage, or would they oppose it? Gates ends off his letter on an extremely optimistic note saying “A cheap, clean source of energy would change everything. Imagine that.” Unfortunately, much of this seems doomed to remain exactly that, an imagination. While he has certainly said much of the urgency of the situation, his letter does little to convince me of the viability of his plan. ANSWER #3: NOTE: this answer contains a strong and creative critique of Gates’ position – although it needs a bit of polishing in the intro paragraph to preview these points (and perhaps more brief quotes and examples to summarize Gates): In his 2016 Annual Letter, Bill Gates uses the phrase “Energy Miracle” rather than “Energy Solution” in order to more strongly assert the challenges our generation must face to find the ideal energy source that is, as he describes himself, “cheap and clean”. In his letter, Gates begins by addressing high school students about the presumably unknown existence of people in poor living conditions without access to energy sources like electricity. He goes on to explain that in order for these people to have access to developed countries’ “benefits and opportunities that come with power…we need to find a way to get them cheap, clean energy”. Backed by scientific research, Gates claims that through his formula P*S*E*C = C02, the variable that would allow the greenhouse gas C02 from aggravating climate change issues and making the poorest families suffer even more, is to find a “miracle” invention that will eliminate carbon emissions to zero. In my opinion Bill Gates’, use of the word “miracle” to describe the type of energy we need to find makes his overall argument about being able to help the poor with clean energy less convincing. Bill Gates reports seeing how people in countries including Nigeria and Tanzania live in pitiful situations of poverty and writes, “I like to think about what an energy miracle like that would mean in a slum I once visited”. He emphasizes the dramatically less developed life-style people there live in compared to that of people in developed Western countries. In my opinion, Gates has a point in encouraging our generation to urgently look for ways to come up with a zero carbon emission system to halt climate change. However, I cannot clearly see how clean energy would be the “miracle” that would help us succeed in the primary goal Gates’ asserts, which is that of helping the poor. Gates takes Nigeria as a basic example. It is important to remember that Nigeria is ranked thirteenth in the world for countries who hold and produce the largest resources of oil production. However, their unstable economic and political situation makes it so that wealth from their source of oil is not used to benefit their own people. The “energy miracle” that Gates claims would allow Nigerians to “run hospitals, light up schools, and use tractors to grow more food” is instead used to exploit the countries people and benefit the economies of already developed countries. In Tanzania, a leader in the resource of Gold in Africa and also the country from which Gates shows a photo of a girl “doing her homework by candlelight”, is home to children who do not even go to school, but work in Gold mines. In other words, the “energy miracle” Gates claims will be difficult to find seems even more “miracle” and idealistic in nature because for me, it doesn’t fully address the question of why are these people already poor in a generation where energy in the form of oil is already cheap compared to how much newly invented clean energy will be? Gates makes too much of an idealized connection between clean energy and helping the poor. Furthermore, Gates’ use of the word “miracle” automatically makes me think that changing the way those countries are integrated into our current capitalistic and consumer-based society seems much to idealistic for him to even consider. Here’s a well-organized answer that provides a strong defense of Gates’ position. But aren’t the “strong, rich” people precisely the ones Gates’ is counting on? I could have used a bit more explanation of this point. Bill Gates demands an “energy miracle” because that is what our planet needs. We no longer have the luxury of waiting around for the smart, rich people of the world to solve the growing problem of climate change. By laying out the problems we, as a species, are up against and being honest about what it will take to combat them, he puts forth an extremely convincing and rousing call to action from any and everyone who has any stake at all in the future of our planet. We have been feeling the effects of climate change for a while now. The Earth is getting hotter every year, thousands of animal and plant species are going extinct, and places like California have not had a “normal” year of rain for many years. Things are only continuing to get worse, and scientists say, “...that to avoid these dramatic long-term changes to the climate, the world must cut greenhouse gas emissions by up to 80 percent by 2050, and eliminate them entirely by the end of the century.” Below is Gates’ equation for calculating the amount of CO2 produced by the world: The goal is to get the amount of CO2 produced to equal zero. P (world population) is going up, S (services used per person) is going up, E (energy needed to provide those services) is going down but can never reach zero, so C (carbon produced to produce the energy) is what desperately needs to become zero. We have made some great strides towards this goal, with “new green technologies [that] are allowing the world to produce more carbon- free energy from solar and wind power.” Some (naysayers) would argue that this existing technology is enough, and we just need to work on getting things like solar panels and wind farms all around the world, but Gates claims otherwise. He argues that, while solar and wind power are great, they are not enough, because “solar and wind power are reliable energy sources so long as the sun is shining and the wind is blowing. But people still need dependable energy on cloudy days, at nighttime, and when the air is still.” He also points out that the energy produced on a really sunny day can’t be saved to use on a cloudy one, because no battery exists that would be able to store so much energy. Solar and wind alone could never be enough to power the world without the use of fossil fuels. With such a small amount of time to make a huge change to the way we power our world and so little idea how we’re going to do that, there is no other option we have than to rely on an “energy miracle”. Some might say that calling for an “energy miracle” will discourage people from working to come up with an answer to our energy problem, but I disagree. I feel that by being honest with the readers about the gravity of the situation that we, the inhabitants of Planet Earth, are in, Gates earns a huge amount of credibility and provides a very convincing argument. By citing examples like the invention of the personal computer, Internet, and the polio vaccine, he disproves the notion that “miracle” = impossible. Gates even lays out exactly what we need to do in order to make this miracle happen. He calls for a “massive amount of research into thousands of new ideas— even ones that might sound a little crazy…”, and provides a couple of examples of some “crazy” ideas already in the works- “new ways to make solar and wind power available to everyone around the clock”, “a possible way to use solar energy to produce fuel”, or “batteries the size of swimming pools with huge storage capacity”. One crucial point he makes is that the governments of countries all around the world need to invest and focus on research into clean energy. The government plays a large role in technological advancement and scientific research, and he urges them to make research into clean energy one of their top priorities. Perhaps the most important and motivating part of Gates’ letter comes at the bottom, where he urges young people like myself and my classmates in this English class to play our part in creating this “energy miracle”. Gates reminds us that this problem is our problem to solve, and that we are the ones who will inherit a dying planet if we fail to act soon. He says that by getting educated and speaking out about any ideas we have on how to solve the energy crisis, we can be the ones to create the energy miracle that the planet desperately needs. I know how determined and persistent the members of my generation are, and I have seen how willing we are to rally behind one another to promote our cause. If we can make combating climate change our #1 mission, I know that we will be the ones to discover the “clean energy breakthrough” that “will save our planet and power our world.”