Posted by on 21/04/2009 at 04:14PM
From the Wonk Room.
As Congressional hearings on draft green economy legislation begin, the
Environmental Protection Agency has found that the bill will “play a
critical
role
in the American economic recovery and job growth.” The initial
EPA analysis, based on the draft of the
American Clean Energy and Security Act (ACES) released by Rep. Henry
Waxman (D-CA) and Rep. Edward Markey (D-MA), looks only at the effects
of the cap-and-trade “market-based emissions program,” without modeling
the effects of the complementary renewable energy and energy efficiency
standards
in this comprehensive legislation. Despite the limited review, the
EPA has found that Waxman-Markey would “enable
American workers to serve in a central role in our clean energy
transformation”:
The draft bill would establish a wide range of policies to promote the
development and deployment of new clean energy technologies that would
fundamentally change the way we produce, deliver, and use energy.
The bill would: (1) advance energy efficiency and reduce reliance on
oil; (2) stimulate innovation in clean coal technology to ensure that
coal remains an important part of the U.S. energy portfolio by
capturing harmful greenhouse gas emissions before they enter the
atmosphere; (3) accelerate the use of renewable sources of energy,
including biomass, wind, solar, and geothermal; (4) create strong
demand for a domestic manufacturing market for these next generation
technologies that will enable American workers to serve in a central
role in our clean energy transformation; and (5) play a critical
role in the American economic recovery and job growth – from
retooling shuttered manufacturing plants to make wind turbines, to
using equipment and expertise in drilling for oil to develop clean
energy from underground geothermal sources, to tapping into American
ingenuity to engineer coal-fired power plants that do not contribute
to climate change.
The ACES Act does not address the question of
how allocate the revenues of a carbon market auction. Industry
executives and
conservative allies like Sen. John
McCain
(R-AZ) are calling for free giveaways to polluters. However, the
EPA analysis finds that polluter giveaways are
“highly regressive.” A full auction of permits and equitable
returns,
however, allows for working families to come out
ahead:
Assuming that the bulk of the revenues from the program are returned
to households, the cap-and-trade policy has a relatively modest
impact on U.S. consumers. . . . Returning the revenues in this fashion
could make the median household, and those living at lower ends of
the income distribution, better off than they would be without the
program.
Posted by on 14/04/2009 at 07:46PM
From the Wonk Room.
Yesterday, the Energy Department proposed lighting
standards
for fluorescent and incandescent lamps that could “save consumers and
businesses almost $40
billion between
2012 and 2042 and eliminate the need for as much as 3,850 megawatts of
power generating capacity by that date.”
Rep. Ed Markey (D-MA), speaking at an MIT
conference on a clean-energy
economy
yesterday: “We have to set aside a certain amount of carbon
credits
to ensure that the steel and the paper and other trade-sensitive,
energy-intensive industries are not exploited in the near term by the
Chinese and others.”
The National Marine Fisheries Service announced it “will protect
habitat for belugas
in Alaska’s Cook Inlet, despite a lawsuit from Gov. Sarah
Palin
(R) seeking to wrest the whales from federal management.”
Chairman Edward J. Markey will host President Obama’s top climate,
energy and science advisers along with other energy experts at a forum
at MIT on Monday, April 13 to discuss the
future of clean energy in national policy and in the Massachusetts
economy. They will discuss clean energy solutions for creating jobs,
improving our national security and protecting our planet from global
warming. Last week, Rep. Markey released draft legislation that will be
the main congressional vehicle to push clean energy technologies and
create millions of new jobs.
Speakers
- Chairman Edward J. Markey (D-Malden), Chairman of the Select Committee
on Energy Independence and Global Warming and Energy and Environment
Subcommittee
- Carol Browner, Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate
Change
- John Holdren, Assistant to the President for Science and Technology
- Ernest J. Moniz, Professor of Physics and Cecil and Ida Green
Distinguished Professor, MIT
- Dr. Susan Hockfield, President, MIT
- Daniel Yergin, Pulitzer Prize-winning author and Chairman of Cambridge
Energy Research Associates
- Massachusetts clean energy CEOs and others
Wong Auditorium, Tang Center, Building E51,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts
Live
webcast.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Massachusetts
13/04/2009 at 10:00AM
More than two dozen organizations, including well-respected groups from
the research, advocacy, faith-based, labor and civil rights communities,
have come together to ensure that emerging climate legislation protects
and provides opportunity for society’s most vulnerable individuals and
families. The Climate Equity Alliance unites around shared concerns
about the effects of climate change and climate change legislation on
low- and moderate-income households. Alliance members believe climate
legislation should both help to build an inclusive green economy —
providing pathways to prosperity and expanding opportunity for America’s
workers and communities — and ensure that low- and moderate-income
people receive relief from the higher energy costs that will result, so
that they are not pushed into poverty or made poorer.
This conference call for reporters will unveil the Climate Equity
Alliance and present the principles drawing these groups together, with
particular attention to how policymakers should move forward following
the draft legislation introduced by Representatives Henry Waxman (D-CA)
and Edward Markey (D-MA).
Speakers:
- Robert Greenstein, Executive Director, Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities
- Phaedra Ellis-Lamkins, CEO, Green For All
- Gerry Hudson, Executive Vice President, SEIU
- Other speakers TBA
Click here
to register for this conference call.
CLIMATE EQUITY ALLIANCE MEMBERS INCLUDE:
- Green for All
- Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
- Center for American Progress
- Service Employees International Union
- NAACP
- National Hispanic Environmental Council
- Oxfam America
- First Focus
- Economic Policy Institute
- Redefining Progress
- US Action
- Coalition on Human Needs
- The Workforce Alliance
- Center for Law and Social Policy
- The Washington Office of Public Policy, Women’s Division, United
Methodist Church
- Union for Reform Judaism
- National Low Income Housing Coalition
- ACORN
- Policy Link
- Citizens for Tax Justice
- Enterprise Community Partners
Center for American Progress
Climate Equity Alliance
District of Columbia
08/04/2009 at 11:00AM