Posts Tagged ‘Keith Johnson’

As the Senate Gears Up on Climate Change, LCFS Sure to Surface

Monday, October 26th, 2009

Late last Friday evening, Senators John Kerry (D-MA) and Barbara Boxer (D-CA) released the latest update (known in Washington as the “chairman’s mark”) to their sweeping global warming legislation, announcing “the carbon allocation winners” prior to this week’s Senate Environment and Public Works Committee hearings on the bill.

According to the Wall Street Journal:

The proposal by Ms. Boxer, of California, and Mr. Kerry, of Massachusetts, is likely to go through several iterations, as lawmakers seek to gain enough support to pass the measure on the Senate floor.

As was the case in the US House, many expect this comprehensive bill to change in a number of ways relative to its original version. That includes the possibility of the authors clearing some space for a low-carbon fuel standard (LCFS), effectively blocking Canadian oil from reaching US consumers.

Canada’s sands represent the largest crude oil reserves outside of the Middle East, and help meet nearly 20 percent of the US’s daily energy needs. Cutting off affordable North American energy supplies would only deepen our dependence on some of the most unstable regions of the world. This is not only bad policy, but it also runs counter to President Obama’s stated energy goals, too.

In fact, recently Tony Podesta, the one-time Clinton White House chief of staff and informal Obama environmental advisor, discussed an LCFS with The Globe and Mail:

I think a low-carbon fuel standard is probably in the offing.” As an early proponent of California’s low-carbon fuel standard Mr. Podesta also said the Canadian oil sands would still be penalized heavily under a federal fuel regulation, which he expects to be eventually adopted.

President Obama even sponsored LCFS legislation while serving in the Senate, leading many observers to believe Congress may eventually pass a national, one-size-fits-all fuel mandate.

Major news organizations and independent research experts are taking notice of this threat to consumers, too. Today, Wall Street Journal’s Keith Johnson writes this about a new report by energy consultants Wood Mackenzie:

Cap-and-trade legislation will cost U.S. refiners about $100 billion a year by 2015 and put them at a competitive disadvantage to refiners in Europe.

There’s another irony to the climate legislation, Wood Mac notes: While it would hit refiners hard, it doesn’t seem that it would actually do much to reduce U.S. demand for oil products. “The impact of the higher fuel costs (projected for the near term) is not anticipated to have a material impact on oil product demand, with other legislative measures (auto fleet efficiency and Low Carbon Fuels Standards) being much more significant,” the report concludes.

As the U.S. Senate begins debate on climate change legislation tomorrow, American consumers who oppose higher fuel costs and favor North American energy over overseas imports should send a loud message to Congress that an LCFS is wrong for our security and for our pocketbooks.

Seeing the Light: Sen. Alexander Now “Basically Undecided” on LCFS Mandate

Monday, October 12th, 2009

U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander, the third-ranking Republican and senior senator from Tennessee, has not been reserved in demonstrating support for a nationwide, one-size-fits-all low carbon full standard (LCFS).

As recently as July, “[Sen. Alexander] called for a low-carbon fuel standard, which he argues would not raise the price of gasoline.”

And earlier that month, according to a Grist.org report, “Alexander wants Congress to put in place a ‘low-carbon fuel standard,’ which he said would ‘not deliberately raise the price of gasoline.’”

In June, the senator said that “A low-carbon fuel standard I think makes a lot of sense for our country in dealing with carbon.”

But the nature of his support for this job-killing legislation appears to have shifted — thanks in large part to an uproar of mounting opposition from within his own state. In fact, according to today’s Knoxville News Sentinel, Senator Alexander “basically is undecided on the proposed [LCFS] policy.” The Tennessean and the Nashville Post picked this article up, too.

Under the headline “Letter inspires Alexander to rethink stance on fuel standards,” Tom Humphrey reports this:

Sen. Lamar Alexander says a letter from state Rep. Susan Lynn inspired a “good conversation” between the two over his stance on low-carbon fuel standards.

In her letter earlier this month, Lynn, R-Mount Juliet, said the proposal could be “categorized as a misguided effort to improve the environment.”

Alexander has been quoted as saying the low-carbon fuel standard “makes a lot of sense.”

The letter from state Rep. Susan Lynn to the senator referenced in the Knoxville News Sentinel article was highlighted by the Wall Street Journal last week. In a post by Keith Johnson under the headline “Tennessee Pols to Lamar Alexander: Forget About Low-Carbon Fuel Standards,” the Journal reported this, which was quickly picked up by The Tennessean and the Nashville Post:

[Tennessee] State Rep. Susan Lynn fired off a letter last Friday chiding Sen. Alexander for even flirting with [an LCFS]; Sen. Alexander has repeatedly said that such a standard could help the environment without raising energy prices. “At its core, a [low carbon fuel standard] would initiate a direct ban on the importation of some of our most secure and affordable sources of energy,” she wrote. “It would necessarily expand America’s already dangerous dependence on foreign, unstable energy from suppliers half-a-world away…”

Other Tennessee news outlets have been closely following this development, as well. The Chattanooga Times Free Press’s Matt Wilson reported this over the weekend:

In an Oct. 2 letter to the senator, state Rep. Susan Lynn, R-Mount Juliet, asked Sen. Alexander to oppose a “low-carbon fuel standard,” despite the senator’s assertions that such a standard “makes a lot of sense for our country.” The standard would reduce carbon emissions from motor fuels.

Rep. Lynn said the standard “would reduce the availability of the fuel by limiting the amount and type of oil we’re able to access from some of our closest, most trusted allies in the hemisphere.”

As the Senate continues to move forward with climate change legislation, Tennesseans and American consumers alike are relying on Sen. Alexander to do the right thing and fight to oppose low carbon fuel standard mandate that will cut off supplies of affordable and reliable energy and will deepen our dependence on unstable region’s of the world to keep our economy moving.

Thankfully, signs are starting to point in the direction of the idea that he’s begun to hear that message.

Held Accountable: Sen. Alexander’s Support for a ‘Fancy, Complicated Words’ Low-Carbon Fuel Mandate Called Out by Fellow TN GOPer

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

US Sen. Lamar Alexander has not been bashful about his support for a national, one-size-fits-all low-carbon fuel standard (LCFS), which, according to the non-partisan Americans for Tax Reform (ATR), will “Increase transportation costs and taxes,” and “Cut off oil supplies from Canada and the western US, making the US more dependent on less secure sources of energy.”

ATR is not alone in their LCFS analysis, though.

Recently it came to light that a top US Energy Department policy advisor named Carmen Difiglio told a group of academics and energy experts in California that a national LCFS – like the one Sen. Alexander is fighting for – “will not reduce global CO2 emissions.”

In his presentation, Mr. Difiglio also determined that under an LCFS, the affordable and reliable Canadian energy that we now import – which would effectively be banned under a Lamar Alexander LCFS mandate – would simply be redirected to other nations, including our chief global competitors in China.

Others are speaking out, too. Recently, according to the Wall Street Journal:

“State Rep. Susan Lynn fired off a letter last Friday chiding Sen. Alexander for even flirting with the idea; Sen. Alexander has repeatedly said that such a standard could help the environment without raising energy prices. “At its core, a [low carbon fuel standard] would initiate a direct ban on the importation of some of our most secure and affordable sources of energy,” she wrote. “It would necessarily expand America’s already dangerous dependence on foreign, unstable energy from suppliers half-a-world away…”

Under the headline “Tennessee Pols to Lamar Alexander: Forget About Low-Carbon Fuel Standards,” the Journal’s Keith Johnson reports:

“[Rep. Lynn] urged Sen. Alexander to use his position on the Senate Environment and Public Works committee “to stand up for the energy interests of Tennessee and prevent this plan from advancing any further.” This is just the latest salvo in the low-carbon fuel wars—a public broadside against an energy policy that doesn’t actually exist. There was a low-carbon fuel standard in the first version of the Waxman-Markey bill; it later disappeared. It has yet to appear in the Senate climate bill. Yet the very idea of a low-carbon fuel standard that could put Canadian oil off limits has the energy-security crowd mobilizing.”

This story predictably has created considerable buzz in Tennessee political circles. In fact, the WSJ article reappeared on The Tennessean and The Nashville Post. Rep. Lynn’s site also linked to the article.

With hope, increased pressure from pragmatic legislators like Rep. Susan Lynn, and other consumers in Tennessee who understand the harmful impacts that an LCFS would have on gas prices, our economy and our national security, will prompt Sen. Alexander – and other anti-Canadian and unconventional energy proponents – to reconsider the facts on this issue, and maybe even reevaluate their positions on it.

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