U.S. Government
International
Academic, Non-Governmental
Five national environmental groups declared the stalled Senate climate and energy bill "unacceptable" on Tuesday, saying the nation would be better off in the long run without it.
The current form of the bill is "too high a price" and "the solution is a fake one," said Bill Snape, senior counsel at the Center for Biological Diversity, a member of the coalition of groups opposed to the bill.
The disagreement between that coalition, members of Congress and 31 other environmental groups that came out in support of legislation this week highlights the battles to come as Congress attempts to work out a compromise climate bill this year or next.
Among the coalition's biggest gripes is a provision that would jettison the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's authority to regulate greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act.
"Industry doesn't like the Clean Air Act because it actually reduces pollutants," said Snape.
The groups also objected to the bill's emissions reduction goals; the billions being thrown into cleaner coal and nuclear power; and language that would handicap the ability of states to curtail global warming pollution.
The analysis of the bill was based on what they "learned from the grapevine" — not the bill itself, which co-author John Kerry (D-Mass.) says is finished but has yet to be released. The groups said they were shut out of the closed-door talks, but they believe they know enough to be "very concerned."
According to the coalition — which includes Public Citizen, Friends of the Earth, Institute for Policy Studies and Friends Committee on National Legislation — the bill intends to cut emissions in the range of 17 percent below 2005 levels by 2020, in line with the Obama administration's goal. That would be about 4 percent below 1990 levels.
"The Senate is very far away from what the science needs," said Snape.
The groups want to see a 40 percent reduction below 1990 levels by that same year, based on the 25-40 percent target recommended by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and what they see as the nation's historic responsibility for climate damage.
A big concern with the low target is the "very problematic" role that carbon offsets could play in meeting it, said Devin Helfrich of Friends Committee on National Legislation, a Quaker group.
Helfrich said this was the case with cap-and-trade legislation that passed the House of Representatives last June. The Waxman-Markey American Clean Energy and Security (ACES) bill has served as the basis for a number of essential features of its Senate counterpart, though the Senate's use of cap-and-trade is expected to be far narrower.
Offsets give polluters the option to invest in projects that reduce greenhouse gases rather than cut their own.
Waxman-Markey allowed for 2 billion tons of domestic and international offsets each year — meaning offsets could become the primary vehicle by which the country could shrink its carbon footprint.
The Senate bill, Helfrich said, would likely allow 1.5 billion tons of international offsets annually.
"Using offsets threatens the integrity of the emissions reductions," said Tyson Slocum, director of the clean energy program at Public Citizen, a consumer advocacy group based in Washington. The system is still "too exposed to fraud and abuse."
The groups also object to the bill's expected breaks for nuclear power, citing concerns over skyrocketing costs and safety issues.
"The nuclear power industry stands to benefit tremendously," said Slocum. "And this is probably the most undeserving industry in the entire American economy."
In a preview of the bill last week, Kerry said it would deliver loan guarantees and risk insurance to build 12 new nuclear reactors. At a price tag of between $5 billion to $10 billion each, the total cost of that kind of nuclear ramp-up could be in excess of $100 billion, Slocum said.
Solutions that aren't
I'm getting tired of the corporate parties giving us "solutions" so watered down to please their corporate donors, that they don't really make things much better.
The solution is to stop voting for the two mainstream parties on the corporate payroll.
The Green Party doesn't accept ANY corporate money, and represents CITIZENS's interests -- not corporate interests. A mere 5% of the vote for the Green Party will get them matching Federal funds, and send a strong message to the corporatists that we're fed up with their corruption.
Vote Green!
Post new comment