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THE ENERGY BILL just passed by Congress starkly illustrates how utterly have
self-serving interest groups captured Washington's political process. Short
of another redefining election, like 1994 or that following Watergate, our
nation is deprived of a means to effect the national interest.
After four years of effort, Congress has removed most of the good from an
energy bill now designed primarily to dole out pork to the politically
connected. The taxpayer goes $14.6 billion deeper in debt over 10 years. Of
this, $1.5 billion in new corporate welfare goes to the oil industry,
already immensely profitable.
North America has seven percent of world's petroleum reserves — and
declining. The Middle East has 65 percent. In 1972, the year before the
first Arab oil embargo, America imported 28 percent of our oil. Today, we
import over 60 percent and rising. The scientific evidence is now
overwhelming that the global climate is rapidly changing because we persist
in burning dirty fossil fuels. The New Hampshire Department of Environmental
Services calculates that fossil fuel pollution costs our state over one
billion dollars annually in medical care and shortened life spans.
Other advanced, industrial nations have heeded the unambiguous economic and
environmental warnings. Europe and Japan are leaving the U.S. behind in
development of the clean, abundant energy technologies of the future — and
freeing their economies from Middle East oil dependence. Today's Congress
would have cozied up to the hand calculator, patent medicine and telegraph
industries and stymied computers, biotechnology and the Internet.
The new energy bill forces MtBE cleanup litigation into federal court,
depriving victims of state law and state courts to find restitution. The
bill preempts state authority over sitting of liquefied natural gas
terminals and electricity transmission lines. Startlingly, the bill severely
weakens export controls on highly enriched uranium, increasing risk of
proliferation to rogue and hostile-state nuclear bomb-makers. The energy
bill does nothing about greenhouse gas pollution and ignores the national
security problems associated with America's abject dependence on Middle
Eastern oil and gas.
To their great credit, three of New Hampshire's four members of Congress —
Sens. Judd Gregg and John Sununu and Rep. Jeb Bradley — voted against the
energy bill. But it continues to baffle me why only Rep. Bradley supports
the renewable electricity standard. The RES would require that 10 percent of
electricity be provided from renewable sources by 2020. The RES would reduce
electricity and energy prices, increase U.S. jobs and energy independence,
and curb emissions of air pollutants and global warming gasses. These
overwhelming benefits explain why RES earns support from such a politically
diverse group of New Hampshire leaders — from Gov. John Lynch to Orford's
Tom Thomson, from Executive Councilor Deb Pignatelli to State Sen. Peter
Bragdon.
I have publicly defended Rep. Charlie Bass's efforts to find an MtBE
compromise in a Congress which has become a K Street marionette. As tawdry
as it has become, Congress is where the nation's business is done and is
unlike the noble world occupied by editorial writers and Bass's Democratic
opponents.
But Rep. Bass's objections to the RES, like Sen. Gregg's and Sen. Sununu's,
do not compute. Bass told the Nashua Telegraph's Kevin Landrigan that he
voted against RES because existing hydropower dams were not eligible for the
renewable credits. "This would put our wood products industry at a
competitive disadvantage and that's not right," Bass said. This is precisely
opposite to what the forestry industry has been saying to Rep. Bass for
years.
For those who want America to be an economic and environmental leader in
energy, our best option is to keep talking to our delegation and to the
presidential candidates who pass through our state. Ask Reps. Bass and
Bradley to co-sponsor the House RES bill,
HR 983. Please take every chance
you get: ask our present and potential leaders to support and talk about
strong clean energy policy.
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