Following the one-vote failure on
Wednesday
of S. Amdt 3983 to H.R. 5140, the Senate stimulus package that contained
$5.6 billion in “green”
incentives,
various environmental organizations, including the Sierra Club, called
Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) for missing the vote.
On Thursday, the Sierra Club asked its
members
to call McCain’s
office
to ask “why he failed to show up for a vote that could have determined
the future of green energy in America.”
Today, Executive Director Carl Pope blistered the office response to
member calls in a blog post entitled John McCain Should Be
Ashamed.
Immediately, people begin calling and emailing me, saying, “The
Senator’s office says he voted for clean energy, and that your alert
is wrong.” We check. He didn’t. We call his office. Stunningly, his
staff has been coached to mislead callers. “That’s not true at all,”
they say, “he voted for the bill yesterday.” Well, he voted,
yesterday, but for a different bill. However we phrase the question,
we get a lie. “No, if he had voted for the bill, it would not have
passed. That was purely procedural.” But McCain’s staff knows that if
cloture had been invoked, passage of the bill would then only require
51 votes, and the bill with clean energy would have passed. [Ed.-
emphasis added.]
Friends of the Earth announced
today
that it is expanding its web and print “Fix or Ditch”
campaign
with a local network and cable ad buy before the February 12 Virginia,
Maryland, and DC primaries.
The campaign, which challenges Senate Democrats to change
Lieberman-Warner’s emissions targets and allowance distribution
provisions (S. 2191) to reflect the platforms of the presidential
candidates of their party, has drawn
fire
from Sen. Boxer (D-Calif.) and Environmental Defense as well as a
passionate letter of
support from
Greenpeace.
Meanwhile, American Prospect correspondent (and Tapped co-founder) Chris
Mooney challenges the Democratic platforms of 100% auction and 80%
reduction in emissions by 2050 in This Will Mean the World to
Us
(sub. req.):
Many Democratic campaigns, responding to their environmental base, are
currently outlining cap-and-trade regimes featuring a highly ambitious
100 percent auction process for the initial pollution allowances or
permits, with the proceeds going to other needed public policies, such
as investment in the clean-energy technologies that must ultimately
supplant fossil fuels. When it comes to specifying precise reductions,
meanwhile, the campaigns generally seem to agree that we need
something like bringing emissions back to 1990 levels by 2020 and
decreasing them by 80 percent by 2050, through a cap that becomes
progressively more stringent.
An 80 percent reduction by 2050 does indeed square with what
scientists think would be necessary to avoid the worst climate
impacts—most notably, the loss of large bodies of land-based ice
currently perched atop Greenland and West Antarctica, which, upon
sliding into the ocean, would drive catastrophic sea-level rise. It’s
one thing to outline a policy in the abstract, however, and quite
another to get it through the next Congress. As one climate policy
insider says, “The environmental community has a tendency to run their
leaders off a plank; that’s what they’re setting up right now with
this 80 percent reduction by 2050.”
The more moderate approach of the Lieberman-Warner bill is to reduce
capped emissions (and not all emissions are included) by 70 percent by
2050. Lieberman-Warner is also pragmatic in another way: It does not
set up a 100 percent auction for emissions allowances, a system that
major emitters oppose. They think they should be granted allowances
gratis at the outset (or as climate experts say, there should be
“grandfathering”). Under Lieberman-Warner, just 24 percent of
allowances would be auctioned off initially, though the percentage
would increase over time. It’s far easier to get buy-in from industry
in this way, and although Lieberman-Warner may have a tough time
passing both houses of Congress before the election (or surviving a
possible presidential veto), it may be precisely the type of bill that
can sail through in 2009.
What’s achievable in climate policy seems to be changing all the time,
but still we mustn’t shoot the moon. Consider the perspective of Tim
Profeta, current director of Duke’s Nicholas Institute, who previously
served as a chief architect of the McCain-Lieberman Climate
Stewardship Act, which failed by a 55-to-43 Senate vote in 2003. “As
somebody who fought for a freeze of emissions in the 2003 Congress and
was told it was too aggressive, it is hard for me to believe where we
are now,” Profeta says. “The current movement to require 100 percent
auctions and even deeper cuts faces strong political opposition from
emitters, many of whom have good arguments about what is economically
feasible for their companies. I fear that we might pass up the
opportunity for real action now—when it is essential to have the U.S.
begin to reduce its emissions—because someadvocatescontinue to shift
the objectives to stricter and stricter limits as the debate
proceeds.” It’s fine for Democratic candidates, at the moment, to
answer the call of environmental groups—the Sierra Club, for instance,
has criticized Lieberman-Warner—and present highly ambitious
cap-and-trade proposals. But after the election, the new president
will need to be flexible and focus on getting a workable bill passed.
It can be strengthened later as more science comes in—2050 is, after
all, still far away—but we must at least begin ratcheting down
emissions now.
A Los Angeles Times op-ed penned last weekend by
MMS director Randall Luthi, The Bear
Necessities,
defends the lease sale, claiming that “under the Marine Mammals
Protection Act, the bear currently receives regulatory protections even
stricter than those available under the Endangered Species Act.” This
statement ignores the critical habitat provisions of the
ESA which could prevent such actions as the
lease sale.
Last week MMS officials sent a
cease-and-desist order
to Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, who earlier
published “a series
of internal e-mails from current and former Interior scientists raising
troubling questions about how badly environmental assessments of Arctic
offshore oil development were skewed.”
Update The sale has been
completed, the 488 blocks
selling for a total of over $2.6 billion.
Estimated reserves include 77 trillion cubic feet of conventionally
recoverable natural gas (worth about $635 billion at $8/MMBtU) and 15
billion barrels of oil ($1.5 trillion at $100/barrel).
The winning bidders:
Shell (Netherlands, $2.1 billion)
ConocoPhilips (US, $506 million)
Repsol (Spain, $14.4 million)
Eni (Italy, $8.9 million)
StatoilHydro (Norway, $14.4 million – most Statoil & Eni bids were
joint bids)
As StatoilHydro noted in its press
release,
“The area is considered a frontier area with no production or
infrastructure as of today.”
Last Thursday, Darren Samuelson of E&E
News interviewed Sen.
Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) and an NRDC
representative in response to the Friends of the Earth campaign to “fix
or
ditch”
the Lieberman-Warner cap-and-trade bill (S. 2191). In its campaign,
Friends of the Earth challenged Boxer for supporting Lieberman-Warner’s
high degree of emitter giveaways and subsidies and its target of 60%
reductions from 1990 levels of greenhouses by 2050, although the
Democratic presidential candidates are calling for 100% auction and 80%
by 2050.
Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.):
Their logic doesn’t hold up. What we need to do is not waste time. If
we can get a strong bill signed into law, we should get it. And if we
can’t, we shouldn’t. . . . They’re sort of the defeatist group out
there. They’ve been defeatists from day one. And it’s unfortunate.
They’re isolated among the environmental groups.
Boxer went on to emphasize the importance of holding senators
accountable on global warming through test votes.
Julia Bovey, NRDC:
We do not agree with Friends of the Earth. We are not willing to give
up the fight. We believe the Lieberman-Warner bill as passed out of
committee is a very strong start. That doesn’t mean there isn’t room
for improvement.
NRDC had previously described the bill as “a strong start”.
Brent Blackwelder, Friends of the Earth president, responded:
Far from being defeatists, we’re being realists. We’re focusing on
what the scientists tell us has to be done to solve global warming.
It’s not acceptable to pass a bill that falls short of the science.
It’s not acceptable to pass a bill that gives $1 trillion to
polluters.
On Monday, Environmental Defense Climate & Air director Mark
McLeodsent an
email to several Senate
offices
excoriating Friends of the Earth for placing L-W and Boxer “under
attack”, claiming that opposition in the “liberal blogosphere” to
Lieberman-Warner or the passage of any climate bill in this session
“will become orthodoxy if we do not present a counterview from respected
pro-environment voices.”
He characterized Friends of the Earth as “small and fairly isolated” in
contrast to ED and “many other major environmental groups” who “are in
favor of moving forward to get a strong bill like Lieberman-Warner,”
saying also that Friends of the Earth is calling for “unrealistic
dramatic changes.”
The full text of McLeod’s email is after the jump.
This advertisement is running on environmental and progressive blogs.
Environmental group Friends of the Earth, who had endorsed John
Edwards’s campaign for president, today launched an ambitious campaign
criticizing the Lieberman-Warner climate bill (S. 2191) and Senate
Democrats supporting it, noting that Edwards, Clinton, and Obama had all
released climate plans that distinctly differ from the bill in economics
and emissions targets. At
Lieberman-Warner.org:
After years of ignoring global warming, the U.S. Senate is finally
considering legislation to cap greenhouse gas pollution.
Unfortunately, the Lieberman-Warner bill being advanced by Senate
Democrats lavishes up to $1 trillion on industries responsible for
global warming, and in return asks for reduction targets well below
what scientists say are necessary. If this is the best Senate
Democrats can do, the world is in trouble.
Friends of the Earth Action is leading the fight to either fix, or
ditch, Lieberman-Warner, and we need your help.
The good news is that we already have some key allies: the Democratic
presidential candidates. They all have plans that make polluters pay
for emissions and that seek the carbon reductions called for by
science. We think the Senate needs to build on their plans rather than
the weak Lieberman-Warner bill, which is modeled on legislation by
Senator John McCain.
Dingell, D-Dearborn, chairman of the House Energy and Commerce
Committee, said if California got the waiver it could impose
conflicting federal and state standards. The California standards
could be make automobile production “so expensive that people won’t be
able to buy and second of all get so difficult that the companies
won’t be able to produce anyhow.”
Dingell said the California system could lead to 50 different
standards. He said the EPA decision “makes
good sense.”
As has been previously
discussed
on Hill Heat, the specter of 50 different standards is simply false.
Under the Clean Air Act only California has the authority to get waivers
from national standards. Other states can then follow California or the
federal standards. At most there can be two different standards.
Dingell plans to introduce a climate change bill in his committee “as
fast as we can” but wants to exclude the auto industry, arguing that the
CAFE standards in the 2007 energy
bill
are sufficient regulation: “We’ve had everybody else get practically a
free ride and auto industry has to come up with a 40 percent increase in
fuel efficiency,” Dingell said. “We’re going to try to see that the pain
is shared equally all around.”
Update: Dingell has issued a clarification of his remarks, stating that
he considers CAFE standards to be a “carbon constraint” and that the
CAFE standard increase “tightens the cap on automobiles by 40 percent by
2020.” Any carbon cap would entail “further reductions” that would be
have to matched by “comparable contributions” by other industries.
Shepardson also reports on an interview with Margo Oge, director of the
EPA’s office of transportation and air
quality. She didn’t expect the agency to issue a formal written denial
“until next month at the earliest.” The EPA
may be trying to argue that its the EPA press
release
announcing the denial isn’t actually grounds for a suit to overturn the
decision.
She also said that the EPA “completed its
draft of its own new regulations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions” but
didn’t provide details.
On Monday the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
announced
it would miss today’s deadline on determining whether to list the polar
bear as an endangered species due to global warming-induced polar sea
ice loss. As noted in Hill Heat, last week the administration
announced its
intent
to sell off-shore drilling rights in polar bear habitat off Alaska.
Today the Center for Biological Diversity,
NRDC, and Greenpeace
announced
they have filed a notice of intent to
sue
the administration.
This would be the second lawsuit filed over
FWS delays; in 2005 the Center for Biological
Diversity v. Kempthorne lawsuit to compel the
FWS to respond to the request to start the
polar bear listing process (the FWS ended up
taking two years instead of the Endangered Species Act-mandated 90
days).
The U.S. Minerals Management Service (MMS)
will hold its first federal Outer Continental
Shelf oil and gas
lease sale since 1991 on February 6. It is leasing nearly 46,000 square
miles in the Chukchi Sea off the northwest coast of Alaska, with
estimated conventional reserves of 15 billion barrels of oil. Waters
within 25 miles of the coast are excluded from the lease area. This
announcement comes just six days before the January 9 deadline for the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to decide whether to list the polar bear
as endangered
because of the global-warming induced decline of Arctic sea
ice,
some of which covers the Chukchi Sea.
The MMS believes that environmental concerns
will be sufficiently addressed by its
stipulations,
which do not consider the effects of climate change:
The sale area will not include nearshore waters ranging from about 25
to 50 miles from the coast, which includes the near-shore “polynya”
through which the bowhead and beluga whales, other marine mammals, and
marine birds migrate north in the spring, and in which local
communities subsistence hunt. Leases issued from the sale will include
stipulations to address environmental effects that may occur because
of exploration and development of the area’s oil and gas resources.
These stipulations call for protection of biological resources,
including protected marine mammals and birds and methods to minimize
interference with subsistence hunting and other subsistence harvesting
activities.
Environmental organizations are livid. The World Wildlife Fund
published a series of
statements
from Alaska Wilderness League, Center for Biological Diversity, Audubon,
and indigenous activists condemning the threat to the polar bear and
other marine life from the planned sale.
Lessees are advised that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is
proposing to list the polar bear (Ursus maritimus) as a threatened
species under the Endangered Species Act and has initiated a
comprehensive scientific review to assess the current status and
future of the species. The FWS anticipates
making a decision in early 2008 on whether to list polar bears under
the ESA. Please refer to
http://alaska.fws.gov/fisheries/mmm/polarbear/issues.htm for
additional information. If the polar bears are ultimately listed under
the ESA, then MMS
will consult with FWS under Section 7 of the
ESA, and may be required to apply additional
mitigation measures on OCS activities to
ensure appropriate protection.
Update: Sierra Club has launched a letter-writing
campaign
to “chill the drills” in what it calls the “Polar Bear Seas”.
EPA is not following science or the law . .
. This decision is like pulling over the fire trucks on their way to
the blaze . . . The Administration’s first bold act on global warming
– and it’s to stop the states who are trying to do something about the
problem. It is just plain shocking. . . New
CAFE standards, if they go into effect, do
not fully phase in until 2020. The California greenhouse gas limits
will occur earlier – beginning in 2009 and fully phased in by 2016.
With the mounting evidence of climate change impacts occurring now, it
is imperative that we are take action immediately.
This rejection represents bald-faced political interference with
California’s decades-long authority to enforce its own clean air rules
. . . The California standards are the single most effective step yet
taken in the United States to curb global warming. By blocking the
California standards, the administration has stuck a thumb in the eye
of 18 governors from both red and blue states who have led the way on
global warming by adopting these landmark rules.
There is absolutely no reason for the Bush administration to block
California’s effort to fight global warming. Today’s
EPA decision is a major setback in the
global warming fight and a slap in the face to all of the states that
have moved forward when the federal government would not. This
decision cements the United States’ reputation as the nation that is
holding the rest of the world back at a time when our leadership is
desperately needed. One can only hope that the next administration
will play a more constructive role.
The EPA’s ruling is disgraceful. The Bush
administration’s refusal to carry out the duties imposed on it by the
Clean Air Act have polluted our air and water, further endangered the
health of millions of Americans, and cost us precious time in our
fight to address the looming threat of global warming. We can’t afford
to delay strong steps to address global climate change. We will keep
fighting to pressure this administration to do the right thing and
allow states like Rhode Island to take action.
We commend EPA for protecting a national,
50-state program. Enhancing energy security and improving fuel economy
are priorities to all automakers, but a patchwork quilt of
inconsistent and competing fuel economy programs at the state level
would only have created confusion, inefficiency, and uncertainty for
automakers and consumers. . . Under the new national fuel economy law,
automakers will make dramatic, 30-percent reductions in carbon
dioxide.
The omnibus appropriations bill (H.R. 2764) wending its way to passage
in the year-end Congressional rush.
As EE News reports,
included in the bill are $18.5 billion in nuclear loan
guarantees
that have been championed by Sen. Pete Domenici (R-N.M.) and Rep. Steny
Hoyer (D-Md.). Related provisions grant $6 billion for coal-based power
generation and industrial gasification activities at retrofitted and new
facilities that incorporate carbon capture and sequestration; $2 billion
for advanced coal gasification; $10 billion for renewable and/or energy
efficient systems and manufactoring and distributed energy generation,
transmission and distribution; and $2 billion for uranium enrichment
technology.
The loan guarantees come with the caveat that Congressional
appropriators must approve any project implementation 45 days before the
Department of Energy could activate the guarantee.
Funding for continuing nuclear programs includes $1.1 billion for
DOE’s nuclear programs and $8.8 billion for
the National Nuclear Security Administration.
Environmental groups have come out strongly against the nuclear and
coal-to-liquids provisions. NRDC’s Heather
Taylor told EE News, “The loan guarantee is certainly a poison pill for
us. It’s an investment in the bad policies of the past.
In a joint letter to Congress, seventeen environmental organizations
wrote:
On behalf of our millions of members and activists, we regretfully ask
you to vote no on H.R. 2764, the State, Foreign Operations, and
Related Programs Appropriations Act, 2008 (Consolidated Appropriations
Act, 2008) because it would take America down a dirty energy path.
Although Congress started with the promise of leading our country into
a new energy future, H.R. 2764 breaks faith and continues the
misguided, polluting policies of the past.