[Vision2020] July 23, 2010, Wall Street Journal: "Senate Halts Effort to Cap CO2 Emissions"
Dave
tiedye at turbonet.com
Fri Jul 23 19:49:47 PDT 2010
Ah, come on Ted, this is the Republican party of NO. They want NO
future for our kids because, well, I guess, 'it's bad for business".
You expected anything else?
Dave
On 07/23/2010 03:42 PM, Ted Moffett wrote:
> "The Age of Stupid" unfolds, as fossil fuels continue to rule our
> economy, government and way of life... http://www.ageofstupid.net/
> -----------------
> http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703467304575383373600358634.html
> # JULY 23, 2010
>
>
> Senate Halts Effort to Cap CO2 Emissions
>
>
> Democrats Forgo Centerpiece of President Obama's Energy Plan, as
> Cap-and-Trade Fails to Lure Broad Support in Congress
>
>
> By STEPHEN POWER
> <http://online.wsj.com/search/term.html?KEYWORDS=STEPHEN+POWER&bylinesearch=true>
>
>
> Senate Democratic leaders Thursday shelved their effort to cap
> greenhouse-gas emissions as part of a broad energy bill, putting aside
> indefinitely a centerpiece of President Barack Obama's ambitious
> effort to transform the way Americans produce and consume energy.
>
> The proposal would have allowed utilities to trade permits to pollute
> as they worked to shift away from coal—a concept commonly called "cap
> and trade."
>
> Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said Thursday that neither he nor
> the White House had managed to line up 60 senators to support even a
> limited proposal seeking to cap carbon-dioxide emissions from electric
> power companies.
>
> Mr. Reid refused to declare the idea dead. But Thursday's decision
> called into question when or whether any legislated cap on
> greenhouse-gas emissions would reach Mr. Obama's desk.
>
> Now, businesses, such as wind-turbine makers, that had bet on a
> greenhouse-gas provision to make alternatives to coal and oil more
> cost-competitive must recalculate how long it might take for that to
> happen.
>
> But industries that opposed congressional action to limit
> greenhouse-gas emissions still have to reckon with uncertainty over
> how far the administration may push an effort to do the same thing via
> the Clean Air Act and the Environmental Protection Agency.
>
> Advocates of the cap-and-trade approach say that making it more
> expensive to burn coal or oil would encourage investments in new
> technology that reduces greenhouse-gas emissions and energy
> consumption, resulting in lower energy costs overall and avoiding the
> potential long-term toll of climate disruptions on the economy. Some
> also argue putting a price on carbon can ahelp reduce reliance on
> foreign oil. Opponents of such legislation dispute this.
>
> Opponents say compelling utilities to pay for emitting carbon dioxide
> would force them to pass along those costs to consumers in the form of
> higher prices. Republicans branded a House bill that proposed an
> economy-wide system for capping carbon dioxide emissions a
> "job-killing energy tax."
>
> Senate Republicans closed ranks in opposition to even limited use of
> such mechanisms as the clock ticks down to the November elections.
>
> But a limited cap-and-trade proposal backed by Mr. Reid and the White
> House also failed to win over a cadre of conservative Democrats from
> industrial and coal states, who opposed the idea of imposing caps and
> higher costs on the use of coal and other fossil fuels.
>
> Some also worried that the measure would put U.S. manufacturers at a
> disadvantage to rivals in China, now the No. 1 consumer of energy
> according to the International Energy Agency.
>
> China's role in the U.S. debate over climate change cuts both ways.
> Opponents of capping emissions say enacting such policies would put
> the U.S. at a competitive disadvantage to China, which has refused to
> cap its emissions. Advocates of capping emissions say that unless the
> U.S. puts a price on carbon, it will lose out to China in the race to
> develop the energy technologies —and jobs—of the 21st century.
>
> Mr. Reid said Democrats will push for more limited energy legislation,
> aimed at holding BP PLC accountable for the oil spill, providing
> incentives to the production and purchase of natural-gas vehicles and
> funding land and water conservation.
>
> The Senate's inaction leaves Mr. Obama's Environmental Protection
> Agency administrator, Lisa Jackson, in charge of setting federal
> limits on greenhouse gases. Ms. Jackson has already adopted rules
> limiting emissions from cars and requiring state regulators to account
> for such emissions when they issue air-quality permits to large
> refineries and manufacturing facilities.
>
> The agency's authority to do so is under assault. Business groups have
> sued, challenging the legality of EPA proposals to regulate
> greenhouse-gas emissions. And a group of Democrats is pushing
> legislation to bar the agency for two years from regulating emissions
> from stationary sources.
>
> Utilities now will be forced to make long-term decisions without
> knowing how carbon dioxide will be treated, said Mike Morris, chief
> executive of American Electric Power, Columbus, Ohio.
>
> He said that for the next few years, utilities likely would build
> gas-fired power plants, which have about half the carbon emissions of
> plants burning coal. But the cost of nuclear energy will be relatively
> more costly without a penalty imposed on fossil-fuel use.
>
> Uncertainty over the future price of carbon and what sorts of
> technology the EPA will require already is having a "chilling effect"
> on investment in the steel industry, said Thomas Gibson, a former EPA
> official who now heads the American Iron and Steel Institute.
>
> But other business could be chilled if Washington abandons entirely
> the idea of raising the price of consuming fossil fuels. Companies
> trying to develop and sell solar and wind energy technology,
> energy-conservation systems or electric vehicles have hoped that caps
> on greenhouse gas emissions would jump-start demand.
>
> These companies will now focus on certain states that have their own
> clean-energy mandates, such as California, Colorado and New Jersey,
> said Angiolo Laviziano, chief executive officer of REC Solar Inc., a
> provider of solar systems in San Luis Obispo, Calif.
>
> Still, the solar industry is growing at the rate of about 40% a year
> in terms of electrical power installed and is likely to continue to
> grow, said Ron Kenedi, vice president of Sharp Corp.'s Sharp Solar
> Energy Solutions Group in Huntington Beach, Calif.
>
> Mr. Reid's decision to pull cap-and-trade from the energy bill could
> reverberate on Wall Street, where banks and brokerage firms had been
> anticipating climate legislation that would lead to widespread trading
> of carbon "credits."
>
> There is already a global carbon-trading market, with the majority of
> the trading taking place in the regulated European markets. It
> amounted to $127 billion last year.
>
> It isn't clear how many of the provisions Mr. Reid is promising to
> include in the narrower energy bill will survive a Senate floor
> debate. Republicans have objected to Democrats' proposals to eliminate
> the cap on oil companies' liability for damages related to spills,
> currently $75 million, saying the proposals, as written, would make
> offshore drilling unaffordable for all but the largest oil companies
> and foreign-owned nationalized oil giants. Some business groups are
> also rallying to defeat the provisions related to natural gas.
>
> ------------------------------------------
>
> Vision2020 Post: Ted Moffett
>
>
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