A roll call vote is expected at about 9:20 am on the motion to invoke
cloture on the energy
bill
as passed by the House of
Representatives
on December 6.
By a vote of of
53-42
the cloture motion failed.
The following Democrats voted against cloture:
- Bayh (D-IN)
- Byrd (D-WV)
- Landrieu (D-LA)
The following Republicans voted for cloture:
- Coleman (R-MN)
- Collins (R-ME)
- Smith (R-OR)
- Snowe (R-ME)
- Thune (R-SD)
The following Republicans voted against cloture but previously had
voted
for the earlier Senate version of H.R.
6,
which included the CAFE standard, but not
RES or the tax title:
- Corker (R-TN)
- Craig (R-ID)
- Crapo (R-ID)
- Domenici (R-NM)
- Ensign (R-NV)
- Lugar (R-IN)
- Sessions (R-AL)
- Specter (R-PA)
- Stevens (R-AK)
- Sununu (R-NH)
The following Republicans voted against cloture but previously had voted
for energy tax provisions similar to those in the House
version:
- Crapo (R-ID)
- Lugar (R-IN)
- Grassley (R-IA)
- Roberts (R-KS)
Following the vote, the chamber resumed consideration of the farm bill
(HR 2419).
U.S. Senate
Capitol
07/12/2007 at 09:00AM
Final vote on energy
package.
The bill passes 235-181.
The Senate vote is scheduled for
Saturday.
Democrats against:
- Barrow
- Boren
- Boyd (FL)
- Gene Green
- Lampson
- Marshall
- Melancon
Republicans in favor:
- Bono
- Castle
- Gerlach
- Hayes
- Johnson (IL)
- Kirk
- LaHood
- LoBiondo
- Ramstad
- Reichert
- Ros-Lehtinen
- Shays
- Smith (NJ)
- Walden (OR)
U.S. House of Representatives
Capitol
06/12/2007 at 03:00PM
Posted by Brad Johnson on 06/12/2007 at 02:40PM
By a vote of
235-181,
the House of Representatives
passed
the version of H.R.
6
which contains both House and Senate provisions (CAFE of 35
MPG by 2020, RES of
15% by 2020, oil/gas rollback with PTC, green
jobs, and other provisions, RFS).
Rep. Edward
Markey:
Today marks the dawn of a future with less dependence on foreign oil,
more renewable energy, and a safer climate. This bill marks a turning
point away from America’s untenable path of reliance on dirty fossil
fuels that pollute our planet and link us to dangerous foreign regimes
and towards a new energy independence future.
Posted by Brad Johnson on 04/12/2007 at 09:23AM
House leadership is whipping votes today for the energy bill
deal,
to be entitled the Energy Independence and Security Act when introduced.
Highlights of the deal:
- CAFE Standard: Increase fuel economy
standards to 35 miles per gallon by 2020 for new cars and trucks
- Renewable Fuels Standard: Multiple-source domestic biofuels mandate
with environmental safeguards
- Plug-in hybrid/electric vehicle tax credit and advanced vehicle
incentives
- Repeal of $21 billion in tax subsidies for gas and oil companies (H.R.
6), international tax loophole closed, rollback of 2005 Energy Act tax
breaks
- Renewable Electricity Standard: 15% by 2020 (4% may be efficiency)
- Efficiency Standards: new appliance and building standards
- Renewable Production Tax Credit and other incentives: extends existing
PTC, funds renewable research, provides
renewable energy bonds for power providers
- Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Worker Training Program
- Incentives for small business development of renewable energy
technology
- Carbon Capture and Sequestration: R&D and clean coal incentives
Full details of the legislation are below the fold.
Posted by Brad Johnson on 28/11/2007 at 01:54PM
More details on the likely energy bill
compromise
are emerging. It appears that the renewable electricity standard and oil
subsidy rollback provisions of the energy bill (H.R. 6/H.R. 3221), are
being dropped, perhaps to be considered as a separate bill (per H.R.
2776) either concurrently or in the next year. The associated renewable
incentives and research funds paid for by the rollback would have to
also be dropped under pay-go rules.
The rollback was a key component of Speaker Pelosi’s 100 Hours
Agenda:
We will energize America by achieving energy independence, and we will
begin by rolling back the multi-billion dollar subsidies for Big Oil.
New York
Times:
Reaching agreement on that timetable is likely to require
Congressional leaders to drop provisions like a mandate that electric
utilities nationwide generate 15 percent of their power from renewable
sources, including wind, solar and hydroelectric power. Utilities
lobbied intensively against that requirement.
A House-passed measure to repeal $16 billion in tax breaks for the oil
industry is also expected to be scrapped, aides said. President Bush
threatened to veto the entire package if the oil and gas tax bill were
included.
Wall Street
Journal:
Speaker Nancy Pelosi is pushing for a vote next week on compromise
legislation aimed at reducing the nation’s reliance on fossil fuels, a
major source of greenhouse gases. Democratic leaders have wrestled for
months with how to meld the Senate bill, which includes a new
fuel-economy mandate for auto makers, and the House bill, which would
require power companies to use greater amounts of wind, solar and
other renewable fuels. With only a few weeks left in the year,
Democrats are now considering a new option: moving two separate bills.
One measure would include the proposed fuel-economy increase as well
as a proposal to boost production of ethanol and related biofuels. The
companion bill would include the utility mandate, as well as a tax
package rolling back oil industry tax breaks.
Posted by Brad Johnson on 04/08/2007 at 08:50PM
HR 3221, the New Direction for Energy
Independence, National Security, and Consumer Protection Act, passed at
5:40 PM by a vote of
241-172. 26 Republicans
voted in favor of the bill and 9 Democrats against.
At 4:39 PM the Udall renewable energy standard (RES) amendment passed
220-190. 32 Republicans
voted for the provision and 38 Democrats against.
At 8:16 PM, HR 2776, the Renewable Energy and
Energy Conservation Tax Act, was passed by a vote of
221-189. 9 Republicans
voted in favor and 11 Democrats against. The bill was subsequently
attached to HR 3221 and the combined bill will
go into conference with the Senate.
The House will consider amendments to HR 3221,
the New Direction for Energy Independence, National Security, and
Consumer Protection Act, and HR 2776, the
Renewable Energy and Energy Conservation Tax Act of 2007, in preparation
for the votes on these bills.
U.S. House of Representatives
03/08/2007 at 09:00AM
Posted by Brad Johnson on 02/08/2007 at 04:47PM
The proposed amendments to HR 3221 have been
submitted and are available for
review,
as are those for HR
2776.
Of significance for HR 3221:
- Both major CAFE standards bills,
Markey-Platts, and Hill-Terry, were withdrawn. Barton’s
CAFE bill is still on the slate as
Amendment
#62
- Udall-Platts (HR 969), the Renewable Energy Standard, is on the slate
as Amendment
#96
and probably has enough votes for passage
- Herseth Sandlin submitted Amendment
#81
to change the Renewable Fuels Standard program to require the
production of 36 billion gallons of renewable fuels by 2022
- Boustany’s Amendment
#9
makes the Secretary of Energy a statutory member of the National
Security Council
- Shay’s Amendment
#105
doubles the funding for the Weatherization Assistance Program
HR 2776:
- McCrery submitted the Republican substitute for the tax package as
Amendment
#7
The Committee on Rules is expected to meet Thursday, August 2, 2007 to
grant a rule which may structure the amendment process for floor
consideration of H.R. 2776, the Renewable Energy and Energy Conservation
Tax Act of 2007, and H.R. 3221, the New Direction for Energy
Independence, National Security, and Consumer Protection Act.
Any Member wishing to offer an amendment to H.R. 3221 must do so by 5:00
PM on Wednesday, August 1, 2007.
House Rules Committee
H-313 Capitol
02/08/2007 at 03:00PM