From the Wonk Room.
Speaking before a joint session of Congress on Tuesday, President Barack Obama declared that his plan to restore America’s economic prosperity “begins with energy.” The details of his proposed budgetary outline reveal what Obama meant:
Restoration of Superfund.
In 2002, Bush crippled
Superfund,
the federal program for cleaning up the most toxic sites in America, by
eliminating the tax on industrial polluters “that once generated about
$1 billion a year.” President Obama’s budget reinstates Superfund
taxes
in 2011, restoring $17 billion over ten years to the depleted
program.
Polluters Pay To Fight Climate Change And Make Work Pay.
The Bush administration rejected the Kyoto
Protocol
in 2001, and instituted a voluntary
program
to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in 2002, which instead rose.
President Obama calls for a mandatory cap on carbon
emissions
starting in 2012, expected to raise $645.7 billion over ten years.
Instead of sending those revenues back to the polluters, $15 billion a
year will go to clean energy technologies, with the rest funding the
Making Work Pay tax credit to reduce payroll
taxes for
every working American.
Ending Tax Breaks For Fossil Fuel Industry.
Oil, natural gas, and coal companies enjoyed record
profits in recent years, even as
numerous incentives and tax breaks for companies that drill and mine our
shared resources were protected. President Obama’s budget eliminates
$31.75 billion in oil and gas company giveaways and increases the
return from natural resources on federal lands by $2.9 billion over
ten years.
In a column at the Center for American Progress, director of climate strategy Dan Weiss analyzes the budget and finds: “President Obama’s proposed energy budget is a ray of sunshine after an eight-year blackout. Congress must now make this clean energy future a reality.”