Mon, 2014-06-23 05:00FARRON
COUSINS
House Spending Bill Contains Huge Giveaways To Dirty
Energy
The House Appropriations Committee iscurrently
debating a spending bill that would set America back decades when it comes to energy policy
and environmental protection.
The 2015 Energy
and Water Development, and Related Agencies Appropriations bill will designate money to everything from nuclear
waste cleanup to renewable energy investments, and the Appropriations Committee
has made sure that neither of those particular items get the funding
they need.
The bill, if passed by the full House, will cut $113
million from renewable energy projects, dropping the yearly total to $1.8 billion.
This comes only a year after the Treasury
Department was forced to cut renewable energy grants by more than 8% following last year’s sequester
cuts. And while the current incarnation of the spending bill provides $150
million for nuclear waste disposal at the proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear waste
site, it also presses the
Obama administration to
approve the project immediately.
While the bill itself is a slap in the face to
renewable energy, the riders
that some industry-funded politicians have added are a complete assault on
environmental protections.
In order to combat what committee chairman Hal Rogers
(R-KY) calls the attempt to “legislate
through regulation,”
one rider would limit the
Environmental Protection Agency’s ability to enforce provisions of the Clean Water Act,
allowing the dirty energy industry to get away with even more
environmental destruction.
As described on the Appropriations
Committee website:
The bill prohibits any changes to the definition of
“fill material” and “discharge of fill material” for the purposes of the Clean
Water Act.
The bill prohibits any changes to federal jurisdiction
under the Clean Water Act.
A second rider, which Chairman
Rogers fought valiantly to add to the spending bill, would prevent the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers from implementing new rules on the disposal of waste
products from mountain top removal mining. According to
The Hill, Rogers
contends that the Corps of Engineer’s rules “would shut down coal mines
throughout the country.”
Chairman Rogers has his reasons for wanting to exempt
the coal industry from any new health standards, but those reasons are
incredibly selfish. The mining industry is Rogers’ top
campaign donor,
lavishing him with more than $420,000 over the course of his career.
But Rogers isn’t playing favorites with the coal
industry alone. His budget includes giveaways for the entire dirty energy
industry. While he has no qualms about cutting renewable energy
investment, he and his fellow
Republicans actually increased the budget for fossil fuel research
and development.
Chairman Rogers claims that
his committee’s $34 billion budget proposal prioritizes “programs with the highest
national need.”
But according to scientists, the Pentagon, and even some of the heaviest hitters in the corporate arena, addressing the dangers of climate change (and thereby reducing our dependence on fossil fuels) is one of the most important issues facing the country.
But according to scientists, the Pentagon, and even some of the heaviest hitters in the corporate arena, addressing the dangers of climate change (and thereby reducing our dependence on fossil fuels) is one of the most important issues facing the country.
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