Technorati Tags: Climate Change bill,CDM,US on Climate Change,Obama's
eyes on Copenhagen
WASHINGTON, May 21 (Reuters) - President Barack Obama's fight against
global warming got a huge boost on Thursday when a key congressional
panel embraced his plan to create a new, market-driven system for
reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

The House of Representatives Energy and Commerce Committee, with a
mostly partisan vote of 33-25, embraced Obama's "cap and trade" climate
change initiative -- one of the president's top legislative priorities
this year along with healthcare reform.

Representative Henry Waxman, the committee's chairman, said the bill
advanced because it had "substantial support from industry, labor and
environmental groups from across the country."

Among the major U.S. companies that have endorsed a cap and trade
program are Alcoa <AA.N>, DuPont <DD.N>, Caterpillar Inc <CAT.N> and a
coalition of electric power companies.

With the panel's vote, the measure moved closer to a vote in the full
House, which could occur by August after other committees review and
possibly refine the legislation.

Democratic supporters say they want enactment of a bill this year but
the outlook in the Senate was unclear.

The White House is hoping that at least significant progress will aid
efforts culminating in December in Copenhagen for a new international
pact on cutting industrial emissions linked to climate change problems.

"President Obama has made it clear that he wants to go to Copenhagen as
the leader and not the laggard, which we have been over the last eight
years," said Representative Edward Markey, a Democrat who wrote the
bill with Waxman. He was taking a swipe at former President George W.
Bush, who refused to sign onto the existing Kyoto Protocol on reducing
carbon emissions, saying it would be too harmful to the U.S. economy.

In a statement after the vote on the legislation, Obama said: "We are
now one step closer to delivering on the promise of a new clean energy
economy that will make America less dependent on foreign oil, crack
down on polluters, and create millions of new jobs all across America."

LIMITS ON CARBON EMISSIONS

The roughly 1,000-page bill aims to cut U.S. greenhouse gases that
contribute to global warming by 17 percent below 2005 levels by the
year 2020 and 83 percent by 2050.

The legislation also requires utilities to generate 15 percent of their
electricity supplies by 2020 from renewable energy sources, such as
wind and solar power.

The heart of the legislation is a "cap-and-trade" system that would
gradually reduce the amount of greenhouse gases from utilities, oil
refineries, steelmakers and other companies by requiring them to have
permits to spew their emissions.

Supporters of the bill want to use market forces to push companies to
reduce their emissions. Companies that pollute above their limit would
have to buy permits from less polluting companies, encouraging firms to
quickly cut their emissions so they can make a profit from selling the
permits that initially will mostly be issued by the government for free.

Republicans argue such a plan would further slow an ailing U.S.
economy, raise energy prices for consumers and speed the exodus of
manufacturers using large amounts of energy to lower-cost countries
such as China and India.

Representative Joe Barton, the senior Republican on the House Energy
and Commerce Committee, challenged the central notion that humans
contribute to global warming and climate change and he noted the past
several years of lower average temperatures.

Some environmentalists complained that the Waxman-Markey bill had
become too soft on carbon reductions and alternative energy
requirements. At the same time many of the groups applauded what could
be the toughest bill politically doable.

Frances Beinecke, president of the Natural Resources Defense Council,
said the bill would create "millions of good-paying American jobs" and
was "an historic step to unleash clean energy and rein in global
warming pollution."

House Republican leader John Boehner has predicted an opposite outcome
and said this "national energy tax would have a particularly
devastating impact on rural communities across the nation" where fuels
make up a large part of agricultural and commuting costs.

During four days of committee debate, Republicans on the committee
failed to win new breaks for the nuclear power industry and to kill the
cap and trade program.

But they won new breaks for the agriculture, ethanol and oil industry
by including government-backed loans to help finance the building of
pipelines that carry renewable energy such as ethanol.


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Posted By CA. Vinod Dasani to CA. Vinod Dasani at 5/27/2009 12:40:00 PM
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