(CNSNews.com)
– House Democrats, insisting that “now is the time for Congress to pass
comprehensive energy and climate legislation,” introduced a “climate
change” bill on Tuesday that would mean higher energy prices if it
passes.
The American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009 (ACES) addresses
clean energy, energy efficiency, “global warming,” and green jobs. It
includes a cap and trade program -- a drain on productivity, critics
say -- and it ensures “a continuing place for coal in our nation’s
energy future.”
Members of the Energy and Commerce Committee said the bill will create
jobs, reduce U.S. dependence on foreign oil, and combat global warming.
Or, as committee chairman Ed Markey (D-Mass.) put it, “We will create
jobs by the millions, save money by the billions, and unleash energy
investment by the trillions.”
Hearings on the bill will begin the week of April 20.
In a letter to President Barack Obama last week, Reps. Markey, Henry
Waxman (Calif.), John Dingell (Mich.), and Rick Boucher (Va.) -- all
members of the Energy and Commerce Committee -- said one of the goals
of their bill is to lift the nation out of recession. They admitted
that “uncertainty” has “frozen” the private sector:
“Our power companies are caught in a dilemma: they are reluctant to
invest in old polluting technologies because they know that tougher
regulations are inevitable, but they can’t invest in new, cleaner
technologies until they know what Congress is going to require,” the
Democrats wrote to Obama on March 27.
Likewise, automobile manufacturers and oil companies want to know “what
the ground rules will be” so they can plan "sensible investments."
The bill introduced on Tuesday includes the following provisions:
-- Requires retail electricity suppliers to meet a certain percentage
of their load with electricity generated from renewable resources
(wind, biomass, solar, geothermal);
-- Invests in “new clean energy technologies.” One of the bill’s
co-sponsors, Rep. Boucher, comes from Virginia coal country and is a
firm supporter of clean-coal technology, which does not exist yet. The
bill would speed up the availability of technology that reduces
greenhouse gas emissions by capturing and injecting underground the
carbon dioxide emitted from coal-fired power plants.
-- Establishes a new, low-carbon transportation fuel standard to
promote advanced biofuels and other clean transportation fuels.
-- Authorizes federal agencies to enter into long-term contracts to purchase renewable energy.
-- Promotes energy efficiency in new buildings by providing federal
training and funding to states that adopt advanced building efficiency
codes. (Also authorizes funding for retrofitting existing commercial
and residential buildings.)
-- Provides rebates to low-income families residing in pre-1976
manufactured homes. Those rebates can be applied toward purchases of
new Energy Star-rated manufactured homes.
-- Requires states to establish goals for reducing global warming
pollution from the transportation sector (traffic) and requires large
metropolitan planning organizations to submit transportation
plans (mass transit) to meet those goals.
Cap and trade
The bill’s global warming provisions are modeled closely on the
recommendations of the U.S. Climate Action Partnership (USCAP), a
coalition of electric utilities, oil companies, automobile
manufacturers, other industries and environmental activists.
-- Requires electric utilities, oil companies, and large industrial
sources to buy tradable federal permits, called “allowances,” for each
ton of pollution emitted into the atmosphere. Companies that pollute
beyond the limit set by the government can buy “offsets” from other
companies.
-- Scales back the number of available allowances issued each year to ensure reductions in emissions;
-- Entities that emit less than 25,000 tons per year of CO2 equivalent are not covered by the cap-and-trade program.
-- The bill also directs the EPA to achieve additional reductions in
global warming pollution by entering into agreements to prevent
“international deforestation.”
Carbon market assurance and oversight
The bill provides for “strict oversight and regulation of the new
markets for carbon allowances and offsets” – the new “carbon tax,”
which critics say will be passed on to consumers.
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission will be charged with regulating the cash market in emission allowances and offsets.
And finally, the bill includes several provisions to promote green jobs:
One section authorizes the Secretary of Education to award grants to
universities and colleges to develop curriculum and training programs
that prepare students for careers in renewable energy, energy
efficiency, and other forms of climate change mitigation.
Under another section, the Secretary of Labor is authorized to carry out such training programs.
Practically Speaking
Kyle and her husband moved to Brookfield in 1986. She became active in local politics and started blogging in 2004. Her focus is primarily on local issues but often includes state and national topics, too. Kyle looks at things from the taxpayers' perspective in a creative, yet down to earth way, addressing them from a practical point of view.
Gird loins, guard wallet: Dems introduce Cap & Trade energy bill
http://mail.google.com/mail/?shva=1#all/1205e1ef555f02fd Jim Ott's latest hot air on cap and trade
Feel like you are on a roller coaster to disaster? Takeovers, bailouts, government intrusion, bills and declarations are happening at such a fast pace, I can't keep up!
We knew this was on the horizon (along with Govt. Healthcare takeover), and here it is: The Clean Energy Bill. AKA Cap and Tax or Cap and Raid or how to spend an additional $4,000/year for NOTHING.
http://www.cnsnews.com/public/content/article.aspx?RsrcID=45900
House Democrats Introduce Cap-and-Trade, ‘Clean Energy’ Bill
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
By
Susan Jones, Senior Editor


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