Join the "Healthcare NOT Warfare" campaign!
PDA 2006 Election Video
» 56K modem
» broadband
Stop Funding War Video
» All
formats
Click here for the Congressional Schedule
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Washington, DC
Overhaul or Scrap ACESA
The House is scheduled to vote Friday on the "American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009." The numerous provisions in ACESA's 1,000-plus pages do not add up to the steps needed to avert catastrophic climate disruption. Moreover, the bill's emissions trading provisions create vested interests that would make future reforms very difficult.
ACESA's
1) Weak cap. ACESA's "cap" on greenhouse gas emissions represents reductions of only 1-4% below 1990 levels by 2020, far less than climate scientists deem necessary.
2) Offsets further weaken the cap. ACESA overwhelms its own cap by allowing up to two billion tons of dubious carbon "offsets" annually, with up to three-quarters from international sources. If all offsets are used and allowances banked, U.S. emissions from fossil fuels could keep increasing until 2029. ACESA's offsets provisions have been further weakened by the latest compromise: transferring offset from EPA to the Department of Agriculture. (The compromise also sabotages EPA efforts to account for indirect impacts of biofuels production.)
3) Fails to put a meaningful price on carbon. The weak cap combined with offsets, would result in a price on carbon far too low to produce the changes in energy use necessary to avert catastrophe. Free allowances to utilities and energy intensive industries further mute the price signal needed to shift to a low-carbon economy.
4) Trading combined with "subprime" offsets will lead to speculative bubbles. ACESA's trading provisions would create a volatile
5) Weak renewable energy standard. ACESA's Renewable Energy Standard (RES) is watered down to just 15% by 2020, barely greater than "business-as-usual." Furthermore, ACESA defines "renewable energy" to include dirty sources such as waste incineration.
6) Handouts for the coal and oil industries. Through free allowances and a hidden utility tax, the coal industry would receive approximately
7) Pre-emption of EPA authority. ACESA would preempt EPA's authority to regulate sources of greenhouse gas emissions under the Clean Air Act, while also overriding stronger laws at the state and regional levels. By disabling this regulatory backstop, ACESA ensures that - if the bill is not drastically reformed or replaced - its failure as climate policy will be catastrophic.
Overhaul or scrap ACESA
The climate crisis is urgent, but that is all the more reason not to pass seriously flawed legislation. We urge Congress to overhaul or scrap ACESA for a stronger and less complex bill with serious RES standards and a carbon tax with revenue-recycling, managed price or cap-and-dividend approach.
MEDIA CONTACTS:
Laura Bonham, PDA Communications Coordinator
Phone: 435-336-2123
Tim Carpenter, Executive Director
Toll Free: 877-239-2093