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  • Jon Stewart on EPA and email

    Nobody but Stewart could do this justice:

  • Senate Republican tries to tack renewable tax extensions onto housing bil

    Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.) is attempting to add the tax break extensions for renewables that keep failing in the Senate to a giant housing package. His attempts have stalled the housing bill, which would overhaul mortgage finance and create programs to help borrowers refinance. The Senate is supposed to go into recess today for the […]

  • Bush places moratorium on new solar projects on public land

    stop-sign.jpg

    In a parting shot at the competition for its fossil fuels supporters, the uber-lame (duck) Bush administration "has placed a moratorium on new solar projects on public land until it studies their environmental impact, which is expected to take about two years."

    • Drilling for oil and gas, even in pristine areas -- hey, we’re former oil company executives.
    • Leveling mountains in beautiful West Virginia -- we’re all for it.
    • Toxic metals from mining -- bring ‘em on!
    • Logging old-growth forests -- what so you think forests are for?

    But solar power on publicly owned desert land? We need to study that for two years. Wouldn’t want to risk a rush to clean energy. As Senate majority leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said, this is "the wrong signal to send to solar power developers, and to Nevadans and Westerners who need and want clean, affordable sun-powered electricity soon."

    The only upside of this lame last-minute attack on renewables is that it can be overturned on January 21, 2009.

    This post was created for ClimateProgress.org, a project of the Center for American Progress Action Fund.

  • New bill to support renewables offered in House

    Reps. Jay Inslee (D-Wash.), Bill Delahunt (D-Mass.), Jim McDermott (D-Wash.), and Mike Honda (D-Calif.) introduced legislation [PDF] yesterday to provide security for investments in the renewable-energy sector by guaranteeing rates for renewable-energy generation. The Renewable Energy Jobs and Security Act would provide guaranteed renewable-energy payments to small and mid-sized clean-energy suppliers (up to 20 megawatts). […]

  • McCain touts energy plan in another new ad

    John McCain has a new ad promoting his “Lexington Project” to move the country toward energy independence: As with previous ads, this one shows footage of windmills and solar panels, but I don’t see any nuclear reactors. Odd, considering his love of nuclear energy and his plan to build 45 new nuclear reactors by 2030.

  • Appeals court won’t force EPA to speed up CO2 decision

    A federal appeals court has decided not to force the Bush administration to speed up its decision on whether carbon dioxide emissions endanger public health or welfare. The administration’s decision on CO2 is a necessary step in the process of regulating U.S. greenhouse-gas emissions from vehicles and industrial sources. Last year, the U.S. Supreme Court […]

  • BLM contemplates two-year moratorium on solar power plant construction in the West

    Oh, now they care about careful environmental assessment? Oil and gas development is spreading over the American West like a cancer, but this, this solar stuff … it’s a bridge too far! So Congress and the feds are going to let the solar investment tax credit lapse and institute a moratorium on deployment in the […]

  • Select Committee hears testimony on Bush administration’s proposals for fuel economy standards

    Amid a flurry of votes on energy issues in the House today, the Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming held a hearing on the role of automobile fuel economy as gas prices continue to increase. “Because 70 percent of oil goes into transportation, any solutions to the oil crisis must focus on the […]

  • House approves two measures to address energy prices, third fails

    The House of Representatives took up a triumvirate of environment and energy-related bills today, passing two that would increase funding for mass transit and curb oil market speculation. A third, more controversial measure would have forced oil companies to drill on the land they already own. The votes highlighted the split between Democrats and Republicans […]

  • U.K. economist testifies to House subcommittee on the costs of inaction on climate change

    U.K. economist Nicholas Stern, author of the 2006 report, that argued that costs of inaction on climate change far outweigh the costs of acting, said yesterday that the planet is warming faster than previously predicted, which may increase the costs of action. Today he testified before the a House subcommittee on the increasing need for […]