Obama to continue efforts to curb greenhouse gases, push energy efficiency - News - Dirty Oilsands

Home » News » Obama to continue efforts to curb greenhouse gases, push energy efficiency

News


Obama to continue efforts to curb greenhouse gases, push energy efficiency

News Articles Featured | Juliet Eilperin & Steven Mufson | Washington Post | November 07, 2012

Read the full article on the originating site

President Obama’s reelection, along with key wins by Senate Democrats, ensures that the federal government will press ahead with efforts to promote renewable energy and energy efficiency and to curb greenhouse gas emissions linked to climate change.

But the scope of these policies could be constrained by congressional opposition and by concern over their economic impact, making it likely that a second Obama term will deliver some, but not all, of environmentalists’ top priorities.

Investors were quaking already, pummeling shares of coal-mining companies that waged a vigorous advertising battle against Obama’s reelection and which are potential casualties of any curbs on greenhouse gas emissions. Shares of Peabody Energy fell 9.6 percent Wednesday, Arch Coal plunged 12.5 percent, Consol Energy dropped 6.1 percent, and Alpha Natural Resources sank 12.2 percent.

“Obama’s re-election . . . provides the basis for positive movement on clean tech and climate action once the new Congress meets,” the banking giant HSBC’s global research group told investors in a research note. But it added, “Silence on climate issues during the campaign until the onset of Hurricane Sandy and continued Republican majority in the House means that scope for strategic action will remain limited.”

The Environmental Protection Agency will continue to issue regulations curbing fossil fuel production and promoting energy efficiency, according to people who have spoken with senior administration officials but asked not to be identified. Within the next few months, the agency will probably finalize the first carbon standard for new power plants, along with tighter restrictions on soot emissions from all utilities.

By the end of next year, the agency, which is conducting a study of the environmental impact of hydraulic fracturing, will probably impose some federal standards on the operations that are driving the country’s natural gas boom. It could consider imposing tighter fuel efficiency standards on heavy-duty trucks, according to several environmentalists.

“What we expect is the president to deliver on climate, roll up his sleeves and build on the modest success of what he’s done so far,” said Michael Brune, Sierra Club executive director, adding, “There’s a great overlap between what we want and what we think we will get” in a second term.

Jack N. Gerard, president of the American Petroleum Institute, said a second Obama term could be good for the oil and gas industry. Though a sharp critic of Obama, Gerard said that “the president’s views have moved 180 degrees from where they were two years ago. The president is now actively articulating an energy vision, ‘all of the above,’ which includes oil and gas as the first two he talks about.”

Gerard said that the API money spent during the campaign was well spent because it made energy issues more central. “Energy has won,” he said.

He said API would look to the administration to streamline drilling permitting and avoid actions to “stymie or limit” hydraulic fracturing. Gerard would oppose a carbon tax, which he said would inhibit production and raise energy costs. But the HSBC note to investors said that a relatively modest $20-a-ton tax on carbon emissions could slash the federal deficit by $1.25 trillion over the next 10 years.

Tagged with: obama, greenhouse gas, clean energy, election, us

News

Alberta’s carbon tax is a bold move. Sadly, it’s not enough

April 05, 2013 (Tzeporah Berman | The Globe and Mail)

Energy board changes pipeline complaint rules

April 05, 2013 (Gloria Galloway | The Globe and Mail)

CP oil spill in northern Ontario larger than first reported

April 04, 2013 (Nathan Vanderklippe | The Globe and Mail)

Subscribe to The Dirt, the best weekly review of tar sands and pipeline campaign news and commentary.

* indicates required

@dirtyoilsands On Twitter

6 hours, 36 minutes ago
Are Canadian taxpayers funding a $16.5 million Conservative ad campaign to push a losing proposition?... http://t.co/hW7RYp3B9i
7 hours, 25 minutes ago
http://t.co/zSTHikWkRl
9 hours, 34 minutes ago
Bill McKibben's high level view of where the Keystone pipeline battle is heading. A great read from a great... http://t.co/YrQc1fwHqR