Posts Tagged ‘energy & climate’

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If the supercommittee tasked with finding more than a trillion dollars to cut from the federal budget needs some advice, we have it for them.

Public Citizen and three other organizations today issued a new report, “Green Scissors 2011,” outlining $380 billion in environmentally harmful subsidies that should be trimmed. That would go a long way toward solving our nation’s budget challenges. The other groups are Friends of the Earth, Taxpayers for Common Sense and The Heartland Institute. Yes, we know, The Heartland Institute is a really conservative, free-market think tank. As Ryan Alexander, president of Taxpayers for Common Sense, said during a press conference call today, the fact that people from such varying perspectives can come together and agree on something means that it’s doable, and the supercommittee ought to do it too.

The groups propose cutting many fossil fuel, nuclear and alternative energy subsidies (like ethanol). Other targets include massive giveaways of publicly owned timber, poorly conceived road projects and a bevy of questionable Army Corps of Engineers water projects.

Time magazine has a good take on the report. Wrote Michael Grunwald:

Hopefully, the congressional Super-Duper Cuts Committee will take a look at this report before it starts slashing Social Security or food stamps or public transit or vaccinations or other government programs with legitimate public purposes.

U.S. Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.) and former U.S. Rep. Robert Inglis of South Carolina joined the press conference call. Inglis wisely noted that if conservatives get locked into the Grover Norquist school of thought, in which every time a subsidy is rescinded it’s called a tax increase, “we will never move forward.”

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A hearing on climate change and the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) regulation of green house gases promises to be a spectacle that could only be conceived in the 112th Congress. Republicans, anxious to continue what has become a frenzied campaign to deregulate decades worth of work, are poised to call on “expert witnesses,” prepared to say anything to revive a long ago decided debate on the need to regulate greenhouse gases.

According to The Hill, one witness Republicans will be calling upon tomorrow is  the director of the Earth System Science Center at the University of Alabama-Huntsville, John Christy, who in previous testimony on the issue of climate change told members of Congress,

We have found that climate models and popular surface temperature data sets overstate the changes in the real atmosphere and that actual changes are not alarming . . .

‘The names are familiar in climate policy circles. “Climate change deniers have a short bench, so we were not surprised at their witnesses,’ said a Democratic aide.”

If you are tired of seeing this same old fight, click here to step into the ring with Public Citizen and helps us in our efforts to redefine the energy debate and focus on a more sustainable future.

The Obama administration’s plan to allow oil companies to resume deepwater drilling in the Gulf of Mexico is misguided and reckless.

We still have no way to address a catastrophic blowout in deep water, either by stemming the flow of oil or fixing the broken blowout preventer. Without technology in hand to stop millions of gallons of oil from spewing from the bottom of the ocean, we are simply gambling with our environment. We can’t afford to count on luck to keep the oceans, beaches and tourism industries safe.

It is laudable that the administration has reformed safety rules in the wake of the BP disaster, but accidents and mistakes still happen. The BP disaster claimed 11 lives, dumped millions of barrels of oil into the Gulf – doing untold damage – and soiled beaches in five states. We cannot afford to risk a repeat. We have no way of stopping another BP gusher.

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America’s Finest News Source, The Onion, reports on a new “environmental catastrophe”:

PORT FOURCHON, LA—In what may be the greatest environmental disaster in the nation’s history, the supertanker TI Oceania docked without incident at the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port Monday and successfully unloaded 3.1 million barrels of dangerous crude oil into the United States.

and later in the article:

Experts are saying the oil tanker safely reaching port could lead to dire ecological consequences on multiple levels, including rising temperatures, disappearing shorelines, the eradication of countless species, extreme weather events, complete economic collapse, droughts that surpass the Dust Bowl, disease, wildfires, widespread human starvation, and endless, bloody wars fought over increasingly scarce resources.

It is scary to think that a satirical article could be so incredibly accurate. As people such as Jon Stewart remind us almost every night, sometimes humor can be the best illuminator of the the truth.

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Public Citizen Energy Director Tyson Slocum will be speaking today at a “Green Scissors” event hosted by Friends of the Earth (foe.org). The Green Scissors campaign was launched fifteen years ago. Its goal is to identify wasteful government programs that harm the environment. The annual Green Scissors report came out today. It targets four major areas for budget cuts: energy, agriculture and biofuels, infrastructure, and public lands.

Previewing what he will speak about today, Slocum said,

Powerful corporations and other special interests have too much influence in Washington. We need to reform a system that allows corporations to charge their pollution to taxpayers’ credit cards.

The report can be seen online here.

Public Citizen’s efforts to stem the harmful effects of Climate Change and our work dealing with the powerful energy companies  are described on our website.

To receive (not too many) updates about these efforts, click here.

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