US Energy & Roads Bills Headlines - 12 August, 2005
by Staff
US Energy Bill
In troubled times, when an oil crisis looms and when friends can't differ with each other about politics without getting hysterical, the nation's economy has become a sitting duck for any natural or malicious disruption of the flow of oil. A sad irony of this week's signing ceremonies is that it was accompanied on the news by photographs of Sandia National Laboratories' impressive solar energy devices. But when it comes to tax breaks and other incentives, renewable energy, like solar power, gets a miserly $411 million, while uranium, petroleum and coal get $8.5 billion in tax breaks and billions more in loan guarantees in the energy bill. ... The Bush energy bill is a thinly disguised attempt to squeeze every last dime out of the oil industry before all the oil is gone. It does this by promoting oil consumption in a time of growing scarcity, without adequately preparing for the energy transition ahead. This is supply-side economics at its most idiotic. By giving massive incentives to overproduce a dwindling supply of oil, the Bush energy bill not only stimulates an ever-more-rapid depletion of that resource, it also leaves almost no money and no incentives for developing the energy sources that will have to replace oil when it runs out. Supply-side oil waste will destroy the multitude of companies that manufacture oil-based products. There goes plastic, for one. No wonder the names of those who made up Dick Cheney's energy task force that helped dream up this negligent scheme have been kept so secret.
Radioactive dirty bombs can disable entire cities transforming them into Chernobyl-like ghost towns for centuries and rendering their suburbs into toxic wastelands.” said author, engineer and scientist, Roy McAlister, Co-President of Cleanpeace.org and a world authority on energy.
Clearly the President (and the Vice President) feel that super-profits and the promise of ever-greater super-profits in the market aren't enough to encourage investment by America's patriotic energy companies. If our "way of life" is to continue, the Bush cronies must be paid from the federal treasury as well as the gas pump, where the current cost of filling up is no less than $50. They must also be allowed more latitude to pollute air and water, and less regulation of their propensity to gouge and manipulate the prices of gas and electricity.
But President Bush's signature Monday on the nation's new energy bill dashed most of her hopes for beating back the liquefied natural gas import terminal proposed for the nearby port.
Despite widespread opposition - from the Bush administration, a majority of the Senate, leaders of the House Energy Committee, and nuclear regulators from the five preceding presidential administrations - Senator Pete Domenici, Republican of New Mexico and chairman of the Energy Committee, included an amendment that guts restrictions on the export of highly enriched uranium, the same material used in the Hiroshima atomic bomb. If terrorists obtained enough such uranium they could fashion a full-fledged nuclear weapon, not merely a "dirty bomb" that would scatter radioactive waste. US Roads Bill
The more than 1,000-page highway bill is more costly than he preferred and includes cash to bankroll some 6,000 pet projects for lawmakers in their home districts.
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