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More than 40 environmental and social justice groups called on U.S. senators today to declare their independence from big oil and other special interests and finally pass clean energy and climate change legislation.
“We need them to stand up for the workers in Arkansas building wind turbines, for the workers in Michigan building the clean vehicles that will cut our dependence on oil and help clean the air, and for people everywhere who are tired of padding the pockets of big oil instead of protecting the planet for future generations,” Sierra Club President Allison Chin told a crowd on the Capitol lawn.
“Most importantly, we need senators to move forward with a bipartisan, comprehensive clean energy and climate plan that means more jobs, less pollution and real energy independence and security for America."
She was joined by leaders of the NAACP, Rock the Vote, the National Resources Defense Council, Environment America, the Hip Hop Caucus and other groups in launching an Earth Day Revolution calling for climate and clean energy legislation from the U.S. Senate. Their campaign will stage rallies and lobby Congress as it counts down the 40 days to the 40th anniversary of Earth Day on April 22.
“There’s never been a more urgent time to do this,” said Environment America’s Anna Aurilio. “The states have paved the way with strong requirements to cut pollution and increase energy efficiency and clean renewable energy such as wind and solar power. Where the states have led, clean energy jobs and pollution reductions have followed.”
Trade-Offs in the Push for a Climate Bill
Inside the U.S. Capitol, Sens. John Kerry (D-Mass.) and Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) continued another week of meetings with industry representatives and fellow senators in an attempt to write a climate bill that could pass. As happened in the House last spring, the fence-sitters are demanding concessions for their own special interests, and the vote count doesn't appear to be high enough yet for passage.
To get the American Clean Energy and Security (ACES) bill through the House, the bills’ sponsors had to write in extensive free emissions allowances for the coal industry and special treatment for agriculture, demanded by Reps. Rick Boucher (D-Va.) and Collin Peterson (D-Minn.).
In the Senate, Kerry and Graham have already reworked their framework to follow the Republican Party’s all-of-the-above approach toward energy production — they’re now embracing nuclear power, offshore drilling and carbon capture and storage, as well as clean energy and energy efficiency. How they'll address emissions limits, once at the heart of the climate protection plan, is still being worked out.
Even those concessions may not be enough. Sen. Lisa Murkowksi (R-Alaska), who was among 14 senators at a White House meeting Tuesday with President Obama to discuss the bill, has said she might vote for the bill if includes opening the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) to oil drilling.
Sen. Joe Lieberman’s response to drilling in ANWR: “That is just not going to happen.”
What the Senate Is Talking About: Energy Efficiency
While the Senate isn’t talking about comprehensive climate legislation right now, it is focused this week on energy efficiency in the form of several stand-alone bills.
as simple as that
Too Cold is Nature
Too hot is Not
energy
Wind and solar produce not a single product other than electricity. They consume large amounts of concrete, steel, oil, plastic, glass, natural gas, resins .... to exist. But the fact remains they don't produce products. Oil and gas produce thousands of products we use everyday, they provide us with the ability to make light weight composite plastics, fiberglass and carbon fiber and batteries that are all necessary for "alternative energies". Coal and mined iron ore provide us with steel used in wind and solar too. With 6 billion people and growing, more energy and products are needed and will be needed, not less. Despite greenie pipe dreams and ranting, that means more oil and gas and coal production not less. No one doubts wind and solar are great ideas if you can get them to be efficient and commercial, but the fact is I don't see any windmills or solar panels on many houses. They simply cannot compete with oil let alone gas or coal which are cheaper and 24/7 reliable. Greenies fantasize about getting something from nothing. There is a cost to ALL energy and ALL consumption. The corn field comes from clearing the land. The solar and wind factory requires raw materials and land, and that doesn't just miraculously appear from thin air as they seem to believe. The sky is not blue every day folks. We need more energy and natural resources not less. The smart way to do so is to mitigate our impact on the environment, the stupid way is to litigate it. Grow up greenies! Grow UP!
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