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Sunday 23 November 2008
by: Geoffrey Lean, The Independent UK
Barack
Obama and congressional leaders are preparing rapid legislation to cut
US emissions that cause global warming and to kick-start a clean energy
revolution.
Two bills are to be introduced as soon as the
president-elect takes office in January. One will provide $15 billion
(£10.1 billion) a year to encourage innovation in renewable energies as
part of a thorough overhaul of the highly polluting US energy system.
The other will pave the way to setting up a system of tradable
emissions permits to combat global warming. The moves, to be taken
quicker than expected, will galvanise top-level international
negotiations on a new climate treaty that reopens in Poznan, Poland,
next week, and will greatly boost attempts to bring in a "green new
deal" as the best way out of the financial crisis.
Yesterday - as exclusively predicted in The Independent on
Sunday three weeks ago - Mr Obama took the first steps towards creating
green jobs, a crucial element of the proposed deal, as a top priority
for his forthcoming administration. In his weekly radio address, he
announced that he has ordered his advisers to produce an economic
recovery plan that will create 2.5 million new jobs in two years by
building windfarms, making solar panels and fuel-efficient cars, as
well as in modernising schools and re-building crumbling
infrastructure.
Senior Democratic sources added that the president-elect
had picked Timothy Geithner, head of the New york Federal Reserve Bank
to be his Treasury Secretary. "We are facing a sea change," said
Barbara Boxer, the Democratic head of the Senate Environment and Public
Works Committee, of the two new bills. "Instead of denial we will have
resolve; instead of procrastination we will have action. The time to
start is now."
The energy bill is expected to pass rapidly through the
houses of Congress - in both of which the Democrats will have increased
majorities - with some experts expecting it to become law by the
summer. Sources close to the rapidly forming Obama administration say
that it will include tax breaks to encourage wind, solar and other
renewable energies, and the creation of a grid to deliver their
electricity effectively. There will also be incentives for consumers to
buy fuel-efficient cars, and for householders and businesses to
conserve energy.
There will be massive investment in developing carbon
capture and storage, which removes carbon dioxide from power station
emissions. And the bill may include a bid to set a nationwide target
for the amount of energy to be obtained from renewable energy. Most
controversially, there is likely to be an increase in drilling for oil
more than 25 miles offshore, not least to provide revenues to finance
the energy revolution.
The climate bill will instruct the US Environmental
Protection Agency to introduce a national "cap and trade" system for
regulating emissions of carbon dioxide. This gives the polluters limits
on what they are allowed to emit, but leaves them able to trade them;
so those that clean up fastest will be able to sell unwanted permits to
pollute to laggards.
Mr Obama wants to return US emissions of carbon dioxide to
1990 levels by 2020, and cut them by a further 80 per cent by 2050.
Last week in a video address to a global warming summit he promised to
set "strong annual targets" to achieve this. He added: "My presidency
will mark a new chapter in America's leadership on climate change that
will strengthen our security and create millions of new jobs in the
process."
Despite his commitment, some leading congressmen and even
some environmentalists believe that a climate bill is unlikely to make
it into law this year. Senator Jeff Bingaman, chairman of the upper
house's Energy Committee, said last week that it might have to wait
until 2010, adding: "The reality is that it may take more than the
first year to get it all done." This would imperil the international
effort to agree a new treaty to replace the Kyoto Protocol, which is
scheduled to culminate in a massive conference in Copenhagen in a
year's time.
But hopes of early action rose dramatically last week when
Democratic congressmen overturned their hallowed seniority system and
replaced John Dingell, the 82-year-old chairman of the House of
Representatives' crucial Energy and Commerce Committee, with a
so-called "young Turk" in the shape of 69-year-old Henry Waxman. Rep
Dingell has long been an old-school supporter of car-makers and other
big industries and has obstructed tough anti-pollution legislation. By
contrast, Mr Waxman is an ardent environmentalist who represents
Hollywood and Beverly Hills and promises to make passing climate-change
legislation a top priority.
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