"FACTS" ON ENERGY.
The Post proves again this morning that they need a fact-checker for their Fact Checker. Michael Dobbs attempts to counter Hillary Clinton's argument that the 2005 energy bill was the "Dick Cheney lobbyist energy bill" because it gave "enormous giveaways to oil and gas industry" by citing the Congressional Research Service's report that the bill will cost the energy industry "nearly $300 million over 11 years." Actually, if Dobbs had really attempted to fact-check this claim, he would have found that the 2005 bill provided $85.1 billion in tax breaks and authorized spending for the energy industry, as Taxpayers for Common Sense has thoroughly documented. It included huge handouts to the oil, coal, gas, and nuclear industries that the CRS report doesn't include in their analysis. Just a few of the many handouts in that energy bill: a 1.8 cent-per-kilowatt-hour production tax credit for new nuclear plants that will cost taxpayers up to $6 billion, $1.8 billion for "clean coal," and $1.55 billion for the "Texas Energy Center" in Sugar Land, Texas. So it's pretty fair for Clinton to peg the bill as the charity to the energy industry that is was.
Though the Post is once again manages to screw up the "facts" on energy policy, it was good to hear more discussion of climate and energy in the debate last night, including Clinton calling out Obama for voting for the 2005 energy bill, and Edwards calling for a moratorium on new nuclear plants and new coal-fired power plants unless they are equipped to capture greenhouse gas emissions. It was the first debate where there was really any substantial discussion of these issues and where the three candidates differ on them, and Obama even nailed the note Dems should be sounding on climate and energy policy: "There's no reason why, with the kind of presidential leadership that I intend to provide, that we can't make drastic cuts in the amount of energy that we consume without any drop in our standard of living."
--Kate Sheppard
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COMMENTS (2)
"Edwards calling for a moratorium on new nuclear plants and new coal-fired power plants unless they are equipped to capture greenhouse gas emissions."
Why are people convinced of this "capture of greenhouse gas emissions" First, this has only occurred in a small amount of plants, and I assume he is talking about making them IGCC plants.
Take aside that this has been mostly untested in large scale, coal energy comes from things such as mountain top removal and other raping of the mountains. John Edwards is supposed to be supporting the low income "mill workers" and others. If this is the case he would know the horrific impact that has occurred in the coal extraction across the poor rural appalachian regions. Climate Change is such a complex issue that only gets sound bites in these bulls hit elections; whether or not these candidates have any idea of the complex problems I have no idea. Even if they do, Obama and Clinton will probably "sell us" the solution of going in with the corporations, which is how we got here in the first place.
http://www.appvoices.org/index.php?/site/mtr_overview/
Posted by: Jeremy | January 16, 2008 11:18 AM
Was the moratorium on nuclear plants period, or on nuclear plants unless they capture greenhouse emissions? Because the latter is not a moratorium at all on nuclear plants--they don't emit CO2, or other greenhouse gases.
Posted by: dallas | January 16, 2008 5:21 PM