Posts Tagged ‘renewable energy’

Biden: Green Jobs Are Better. Period.

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

Vice President Joe Biden says green jobs, jobs that promote clean, renewable energy, pay 10-20% higher wages than traditional jobs. Biden went on to say that green initiatives create jobs in the U.S. and allow more Americans to get to, and remain, in the middle class. (0:41)

 
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Expert Finds Problems With The Waxman-Markey Bill

Friday, June 12th, 2009

Lester Lave, founder of Carnegie Mellon Electricity Industry Center and Carnegie Mellon’s Green Design Institute, raises concerns about the Waxman-Markey Bill currently being discussed in Congressional Committees. He says that it is too costly and does not give enough weight to natural gas (0:47)

 
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Renewable Electricity Standards Are The Key To Improving Energy Policy

Friday, June 12th, 2009

“Renewable Electricity Standards are the key [to improving energy policy],” said Rob Gramlich, Policy Director of American Wind Energy Association. Gramlich expressed concern that House and Senate Committees have “significantly watered down” renewable energy in U.S. policy (0:31)

 
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Secretary Steven Chu jokes while at energy conference

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

By Michael Ruhl, University of New Mexico – Talk Radio News Service

Today while at the Energy Information Administration annual conference, Secretary of Energy Steven Chu jokes about airplanes mating while making a larger point on how science can learn from nature.

(01:55)

 
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Energy secretary calls for diversity in energy approach

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

By Michael Ruhl, University of New Mexico – Talk Radio News Service

While testifying before the Senate Committee on the Budget, Energy Secretary Steven Chu said that the solution to America’s energy woes must combine many different approaches, based both on renewable and fossil fuels. Chu said that all of the following should be part of the solution of ensuring sustainable energy independence:

• Improved CAFE Standards
• Conservation
• Plug-In Hybrid Cars
• Reducing dependence on Foreign Oil
• Biofuels
• Nuclear technology
• Offshore drilling
• Expanding natural gas
• Clean coal technology
• Hydropower
• Wind energy
• Post-Combustion technologies
• Solar Technology (both photovoltaic and thermal)
• Improving the energy efficiency of buildings

Chu highlighted the importance of coal by saying that the US has the highest coal reserves in the world. He continued that China and India also have high coal reserves, and they won’t turn their backs on that potential technology, so America shouldn’t either. Regarding solar technology, Chu said that presently solar thermal technology is better than photovoltaic technology, but that if photovoltaic technology was more deployed, the costs would begin to come down and the technology in general would improve. Chu continued that natural gas, hydropower, and nuclear technology are all rather clean, and should all be part of America’s approach. Post-combustion technologies are those that pull carbon out of the atmosphere once it has been released, and Chu said that there is a “reasonable chance of success” in those capturing methods, which he noted is a place where he and Al Gore differ in opinion.

President Obama’s FY2010 Budget allots $26.3 billion to the Department of Energy for clean energy. The other main priorities of the administration include doubling the federal government’s investment in basic science, increased focus on climate science, and expanding graduate fellowships in sciences.

House Republicans demand vote from Pelosi at RNC

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

House Republicans held a press conference today calling for Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) to allow a vote on comprehensive energy reform. Speakers said the Republican strategy would solve America’s energy crisis by developing renewable and alternative fuels, using clean coal and nuclear energy, and increasing the levels of American-produced oil and gas.

Rep. Thad McCotter (R-Mich.) attacked the “do-nothing, don’t-care” Congress via phone, saying Pelosi has allowed Congress to stay on vacation while the energy crisis remains unsolved.
House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) outlined the Republican standpoint on energy, saying that “energy security is in effect national security.” Boehner also said that revenues gained by the US government from increased oil exploration would be used to fund renewable sources of energy. He concluded his statement, asking Pelosi to “give [Congress] a chance to show the American people we can produce what they want.”

Rep. Fred Upton (R-Mich.) said that by 2030, America’s energy needs will have increased by 30 to 40 percent. He adds that Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) has discussed the need to increase the US’ nuclear energy supplies by 50% by that time, which the Arizona Senator believes would create 750,000 new jobs. “We cannot stay at home with [this] job undone,” Upton said.

Oil companies have McCain ‘over the barrel’

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

“The reality is that Sen. McCain (R-Ariz.) can visit oil rigs and do photo ops all he wants, but it is pretty clear from the policies he is advocating that he is literally over the barrel when it comes to the oil industry,” said former Iowa Governor Tom Vilsack. He spoke on a conference call to discuss Senator McCain’s opposition to a bipartisan energy compromise due to its rollback of tax breaks for oil companies.

Vilsack also said that McCain’s opposition to the compromise shows that he has chosen the side of oil companies over the American people, and that he is only open to policies that will help these organizations. Conversely, Vilsack says that Sen. Barack Obama’s (D-Ill.) plan would roll back these tax breaks and give this money to the middle class in order to assist them with sky-high energy costs.

Vilsack said that by instituting policies that push renewable energy, he was able to create more jobs and stimulate the economy for the state of Iowa, as well as make more money available to schools and other programs. He also challenged McCain’s image as a ‘maverick’ who fights corrupt businesses and said, “I think it’s time for McCain to be accountable for the decisions he is making.”

Latta: Renewables important for energy reform

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

Bob Latta (R-Ohio) says that the United States must incorporate renewable sources in its energy policy if it hopes to reduce its dependence on foreign oil. Latta also says that about 70 percent of our nation’s oil comes from overseas (:27).

 
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U.S. struggling to keep up with U.A.E. in renewables

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

At the 11th Annual Congressional Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Expo and Forum, several representatives delivered remarks on the potential of private sector businesses in the support of renewable energy. Private companies lobbying for federal assistance presented such products as private home and community wind generators. (more…)

“Americans want energy independence”

Thursday, June 12th, 2008

Jason Pyle, CEO of Sapphire Energy, describes the Renewable Fuels Standard as limiting and regressive. He says that the U.S. was built on “innovation and ingenuity”, but that the Renewable Fuels Standard limits fuel research to those technologies that depend on food and agricultural land. (0:51)

 
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