Home Contact Sitemap
 Română  English
 
 
Home / INTERNATIONAL FRAMEWORK / Additional information / News / White House: Climate bill 'doable' this year
White House: Climate bill 'doable' this year
20.04.2010  
Views: 282   

Rating: 0.0/5 (0 Votes )

print
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/20/AR2010042003711.html

WASHINGTON -- White House energy adviser Carol Browner said Tuesday she thinks Congress still has time to approve a climate and energy bill this year.

Browner called action on the long-delayed legislation "doable," because members of Congress increasingly understand the need to develop clean energy that does not emit carbon dioxide and other pollutants blamed for global warming.
Sens. John Kerry, D-Mass., Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., are expected to introduce a bill on Monday that would apply different carbon controls to different sectors of the economy, without a broad cap-and-trade approach. It aims to cut emissions of pollution-causing greenhouse gases 17 percent below 2005 levels by 2020. It also likely will expand domestic production of oil, natural gas and nuclear power.
Browner said the Obama administration supports the bill and is flexible on how it achieves emissions reductions.
"If they want to use different tools for one sector or another, then that's fine," she said during an event hosted by National Journal.
In a sign of the difficulties the bill is likely to encounter, three Senate Democrats have written a letter to Kerry, Graham and Lieberman warning that they will oppose any effort to shift revenue from new offshore drilling to coastal states.
Sens. Jeff Bingaman of New Mexico, Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia and Byron Dorgan of North Dakota said they have "serious concern" about any move to shift revenue from drilling in federal waters to the states.
President Barack Obama called for expanded offshore drilling last month, a move widely seen as an attempt win support from Republicans and moderate Democrats for a comprehensive climate change bill.
Bingaman, Rockefeller and Dorgan do not oppose offshore drilling, but say it would be irresponsible to divert billions of dollars in federal revenue from offshore leases and royalties to state governments.
"There is no justification for using these significant national resources to provide benefits only for a few coastal states and their citizens. Rather, they must be available for the important public needs of all Americans," the senators wrote.
Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., said her Democratic colleagues were "conveniently ignoring the facts about our current system."
Federal law requires that 50 percent of all mineral production on federal lands goes directly to the state in which it occurs. The law benefits many Western states that have large swaths of federal land, including New Mexico, which has received more than $2.5 billion in mineral payments since 2004.
"Coastal states that support offshore energy production bear the impacts just like states that support production from onshore federal lands," Landrieu said.


Comments Add comment
First name, Last Name *:
E-mail:
Post * characters left:
 
Home   Contact   Sitemap
visits: 967562
top
B2B and B2C solutions , Branding & Graphic Design Services,Website Design and Development , E-Commerce Systems,Software Application Architecture and Development,Multimedia solutions , 2D/3D modeling & animation solutions,Video & Post Production Made in Trimaran
 
Country Energy Profile   /   Country Legislation   /   Case Studies   /   NPI/NC profiles   /   Business plans   /   Awareness   /   Publications   /   News
Phone. +373 22 232247   /  Fax. +373 22 232247

Address: #156а, Mitropolit Dosoftei St., off. 37, Chisinau, Republic of Moldova