As the dust settles on the nation's first serious effort to regulate greenhouse gas emissions, here's a look at some of the reactions to the House carbon cap-and-trade bill (a.k.a. the American Clean Energy and Security Act, the Waxman-Markey bill, or H.R. 2454).
Environmental groups -- and their allies in industry -- were almost unanimous in their support of the legislation, but many noted limitations.
- Two groups opposed it and criticized it heavily, as did the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
- Every interest group pledged to make their opinions known to the Senate, which is expected to debate similar legislation -- but not for several months.
The Good (with Some Ugly Noted)
- The Apollo Alliance, a coalition of environmental and industry groups that support clean energy investments and a national cap on carbon emissions, called the bill a "giant leap forward to establish energy security, reduce harmful carbon emissions, and create millions of green jobs that will put our citizens back to work and get our economy back on track." Chairman Phil Angelides said, "In particular, the bill’s inclusion of investments to help U.S. manufacturers retool plants and retrain workers to produce the systems and components of the clean energy economy is a major victory that will keep millions of new, green jobs here at home and help revive America’s long suffering manufacturing sector."
Carl Pope, the executive director of the - The Sierra Club, echoed many in calling the bill's passage historic: "This bill sets the stage for the dawn of the clean energy future. While imperfect, it sets forth a set of goals America must achieve -- and exceed. Its most important achievement is setting the United States on a path to reduce carbon emissions some 80% by 2050. It also makes strides in halting international deforestation, requires new buildings to dramatically slash energy waste, will speed the development of made-in-America electric vehicles, and provides important protections for workers, consumers, and others who may be affected by our transition to a clean energy future."
He said, however, that the Sierra Club will lobby to make the final bill include "a mechanism for cleaning up the oldest and dirtiest coal plants," more energy efficiency spending and more subsidization of wind, solar and other renewable energy sources.
Jonathan Lash, president of the World Resources Institute, called the bill the most important piece of environmental legislation in 30 years. "Like many, I would like to see deeper cuts," he said. "But what is most important is to start changing the trajectory of the greenhouse gas-generating juggernaut that is the US economy. And the alternative is not a stronger bill, it is no bill."
Environmental Defense Fund president Fred Krupp called the bill the most important piece of environmental legislation ever passed in the United States: "The American Clean Energy and Security Act puts the U.S. on the path to significant emissions reductions, a stronger economy, and a new position of leadership in the global effort to protect the climate."
The Bad (With More Ugly)
- William Kovacs, senior vice president of environment, technology and regulatory affairs at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, a foe of many environmental protection initiatives, including this one, said the bill would harm business: "The American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009, a 1,200-page behemoth consisting of a cap-and-trade program for greenhouse gas emissions, a federal renewable electricity mandate, and a suite of new mandatory energy efficiency standards, will impose 397 new federal regulations (which require traditional federal agency rulemakings) and 1060 new mandates on an American public already overwhelmed by extensive federal regulation."
- Friends of the Earth president Brent Blackwelder said the bill had been "neutered" by big oil, dirty coal, corporate agribusiness, and Wall Street lobbyists: "This bill will produce nowhere near the emissions reductions that are needed to solve global warming, and — astonishingly — it will eliminate existing EPA authority to fight pollution from coal-fired power plants. It will not put us on the path to a clean energy future, but it will lock us into a system that rewards polluters with massive giveaways and can be gamed by Wall Street; it is therefore likely to empower entrenched interests that stand in the way of progress."
- Carroll Muffett, the USA Deputy Campaigns Director for Greenpeace, called the bill's passage a "victory for coal industry lobbyists, oil industry lobbyists, agriculture industry lobbyists, steel and cement industry lobbyists, among many others. But it is a tremendous loss for the American people and for the world in our common fight to avert climate catastrophe. To avoid the worst effects of global warming, we must reduce emissions by 25-40% below 1990 levels by 2020, and the short term target of this bill is a paltry 4%. The massive offsets in this bill means that we can continue at our current emissions level for years, and huge giveaways mean a new generation of nuclear and coal plants."Read
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