News Roundup on Climate Bill Death

Photo courtesy of the AP.

Photo courtesy of the AP.

Last Thursday, July 27, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid announced the abandonment of comprehensive climate legislation, shifting to a much more limited oil spill response-bill with minor energy efficiency provisions. Reid had been hard-pressed to rally sufficient support in the Senate for a market-wide cap on carbon, or even one imposed solely on electric utilities. “It’s easy to count to 60,” he said last week. “I could do it by the time I was in eighth grade. My point is this, we know where we are. We know we don’t have the votes…This is a step forward.”

A roundup of the reactions to Reid’s announcement from various organizations and news outlets is below:

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China Reigns as Largest Energy Consumer

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This week’s energy focus is unarguably on China. The argument between China and the International Energy Agency (IEA) about China becoming the biggest energy consumer is still fresh in everyone’s mind and the energy giant continues to make more news that no one can ignore.

China Surpasses the U.S. as No.1 Energy Consumer

According to figures recently released from the International Energy Agency, China has overtaken the U.S. and is now the world’s number one energy consumer.

China’s total 2009 consumption equals approximately 2.265 billion tons of oil, compared with 2.169 billion tons used by the U.S., according to the IEA. These figures show that energy consumption in China has more than doubled over the last decade, from 1.107 billion tons in 2000, despite the fact that the U.S. still consumes five times the amount of energy that China does per capita. The staggering energy consumption increase is driven by China’s leapfrog economic development and burgeoning population growth.

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President Obama hosted a bipartisan meeting on comprehensive energy and climate legislation Tuesday morning. Roughly 20 senators from both parties attended the West Wing gathering and although it was scheduled to last less than an hour, the meeting ran overtime at 90 minutes. Discussion centered on the Kerry-Lieberman American Power Act, an analysis of which can be seen here.

While the president held firm in his calls for a price on carbon and provisions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, reactions from Republicans were more mixed. The Hill noted that Senator Lamar Alexander (R-Tennessee) said, “Republicans would work with the White House on legislation to boost electric vehicles, nuclear power, and boosting energy research and development.”

Continuing disagreement ensures that a window remains open for a serious alternative agenda. Senator Joe Lieberman (I-Connecticut) quoted the president as encouraging attendees to “forget partisan politics” and “aim high.” On that note, Americans for Energy Leadership has laid out a bipartisan strategy to wean the nation off its addiction to fossil fuel and move towards clean energy independence.

Below is a roundup of news coverage of the White House meeting to date:

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PRESS CONTACT:Teryn Norris (510-593-3716)
norris@leadenergy.org

Jesse Jenkins (503-333-1737)
jesse@thebreakthrough.org

A new policy brief released today by the Breakthrough Institute and Americans for Energy Leadership provides the first independent analysis of how the Kerry-Lieberman American Power Act would impact U.S. competitiveness in the global clean energy industry, benchmarking its provisions against key policy components for technological innovation and industrial development in the low-carbon power and transportation sectors.

The policy brief, titled “The Power to Compete: Analysis of Key Clean Energy Technology and Competitiveness Provisions in the Kerry-Lieberman American Power Act of 2010,” assesses the proposal’s key technology provisions, including research and innovation, manufacturing, and domestic market demand — the central pillars of a national clean energy competitiveness strategy — as well as supportive mechanisms in infrastructure, workforce development, and industry cluster formation.

Download Full Briefing (PDF, 2.3 MB)

Federal energy policy has become a primary U.S. national priority in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill and amidst the ongoing Senate debate over comprehensive climate and energy reform. The May 2010 release of the Kerry-Lieberman American Power Act (APA) currently represents the flagship proposal for comprehensive reform in the Senate, and its future within the context of broader energy reform will be determined in the weeks ahead.

The renewed urgency for energy reform arrives among growing national concern that the United States is falling behind its competitors in the growing clean energy industry. Thus, in addition to reducing emissions of greenhouse gases, one of the core objectives of the Kerry-Lieberman proposal is to enhance U.S. competitiveness in clean energy technology markets. As Senator Kerry declared in the opening of the APA release press conference, “The bill that we are introducing today and revealing today, the American Power Act, will restore America’s economy and reassert our position as a global leader in clean energy technology.”

The United States currently lacks an effective national strategy for competitiveness in this sector, and as numerous reports have documented — including our previous report “Rising Tigers, Sleeping Giant,” which provided the first comprehensive comparison of clean energy competitiveness in the U.S. and Asia — the nation is falling behind in a number of core metrics. However, the policy brief finds that the American Power Act does not contain a comprehensive clean energy competitiveness and technology innovation strategy. While the legislation includes a number of measures with varying degrees of support, it falls substantially short in each core policy component of clean energy competitiveness.

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