September 17, 2010
In This Issue
SENATE: SENIOR Dems seek action on ENVIRONMENTAL MEASURES
While the Senate seems unlikely to approve an energy bill during the few weeks it reconvenes before the November elections, it may consider measures on U.S. Environmental Protection Agency climate rules, power plant pollution curbs and energy tax incentives.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) acknowledged it’s a “cinch” that climate legislation won’t move this year. But he praised negotiations among some senators in recent months on plans to cap carbon from utilities. Amid election-year politics and an already-crowded legislative calendar, consideration may be punted until a lame-duck session. Reid stated that small business legislation will top the chamber’s agenda this month, but recently suggested that a narrow energy bill could see floor action before the election.
The energy bill will likely include incentives for natural gas vehicles and the “Home Star” energy efficiency retrofits program, two measures Reid has indicated he supports. The “Home Star” legislation establishes a $6 billion rebate program to encourage immediate investment in energy-efficient appliances, building mechanical systems, insulation and energy-efficiency retrofits for households.
Both measures were included in the slimmed-down energy and oil spill-response package that Senator Reid introduced just before recess (S. 3663, the Clean Energy Jobs Oil Accountability Act, but that bill — and a Republican counterpart — were pulled from floor consideration after Democrats failed to find enough support for passage.
The bill also could include a provision establishing a renewable electricity standard (RES). Language establishing a national standard was once considered a shoe-in for a Senate climate bill, but hopes were quashed in July when leaders pulled the language from the scaled-back energy bill.
Senator Reid’s oil spill-response legislation also included language that would eliminate oil companies’ liability, which caused contention and delayed earlier consideration. Sens. Mark Begich (D-AK) and Mary Landrieu (D-LA) offered up separate liability proposals as alternatives to Reid’s language, and Reid indicated last month he is willing to compromise with the senators in crafting language. Begich and Landrieu contend their proposals would ensure small- and mid-sized oil companies can continue to operate offshore.
The House approved a sweeping climate and energy bill in the summer of 2009 that would have imposed emissions limits across many sectors. But even a scaled-back approach failed to gain traction in the Senate, and Reid dropped climate legislation before the August recess, citing a lack of 60 votes. Reid stated that attempts to tackle climate legislation in the next Congress should start with a “piecemeal” approach rather than a more sweeping proposal.
Rockefeller challenges climate rules
With climate legislation likely off the table, opponents of the Obama administration’s greenhouse gas rules are planning efforts to hinder EPA’s climate regulations, while environmentalists seek to protect the agency’s authority.
Senate Commerce Science and Transportation Committee Chairman Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) has stated he will seek a vote this year on his bill that would block EPA from regulating stationary sources’ emissions for two years. Rockefeller told reporters in July that Reid promised a vote on the measure before the November election. Rockefeller’s bill has six Democratic co-sponsors, including North Dakota Sens. Kent Conrad and Byron Dorgan, Sens. Tim Johnson (SD), Claire McCaskill (MS), Ben Nelson (NE) and Jim Webb (VA).
Reid promised the vote in order to siphon Democratic support away from a more sweeping resolution from Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), according to a Senate Democratic aide. There was great speculation that Senator Murkowski would have offered the legislation, which sought to altogether block EPA’s authority to regulate greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act, as an amendment during a mark-up of the Fiscal Year 2011 Interior, Environment and Related Agencies Appropriations bill, which was postponed this week.
If Rockefeller’s bill comes up for a vote, several senators may bring up an alternative aimed at draining support from it. White House officials have insisted that Obama would veto the Rockefeller bill if it reached his desk. Many see an appropriations amendment as having a better shot because it would be more difficult for the president to veto.
Sens. Tom Carper (D-DE) and Bob Casey (D-PA) for several months have considered offering a provision that would be very similar to EPA’s “tailoring” rule that would exempt small sources from EPA climate rules while allowing the agency to regulate the largest polluters.
For more information on the EPA tailoring rule, see the May 21 edition of the ESA Policy News at: www.esa.org/pao/policyNews/pn2010/05212010.php
Casey said last month that he was not certain they would offer the measure if Rockefeller sought a vote, but we “certainly want to be prepared to drop our alternative if we think it would make sense.”
Carper to push air pollution bill
The Senate may also move forward this fall with legislation aimed at curbing conventional air pollution from power plants. Sens. Carper and Lamar Alexander (R-TN) have introduced S. 2995, the Clean Air Act Amendments of 2010. This legislation would mandate steep cuts in nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide and mercury from electric utilities over the next decade. Carper had pushed to have the measure included as part of broader climate legislation, but with slim prospects for that this year, Carper is pushing to move the bill on its own.
Carper, Chairman of the Environmental and Public Works Subcommittee on Clean Air and Nuclear Safety, hopes to move forward with a markup in the next few weeks. Committee Chairwoman Barbara Boxer (D-CA) has promised a markup, but no date has yet been set, according to a Carper spokesperson.
Another shot at tax extenders?
Another piece of legislation that may see action on the Senate floor this fall is the $30 billion package of tax extenders that failed to pass the Senate in June.
The package includes the research and development tax credit President Obama last week called on Congress to renew and to increase from its previous rate of 14 percent to 17 percent, at a cost of about $100 billion. It also includes a $1-per-gallon production tax credit for biodiesel and renewable diesel along with credits for energy efficiency, steel industry fuel and alternative vehicle fuel. Republicans blocked three previous iterations of the package earlier this year.
Senate Finance Committee staff previewed a slightly modified bill to industry officials earlier this month, although many details were left uncertain, including how to pay for the bill that would cost $30 billion over a decade. Likely to be included — or even increased — as an offset is a 49-cent-per-barrel tax hike on oil companies to raise funds for the oil spill liability trust fund, which pays for economic damages after a company’s $75 million liability cap. The additional funds would relieve the government from paying for most of any future spills, freeing up revenue to support other programs. Republicans argue oil spill liability fees should not be used to pay for anything else.
Reid’s spokesman said the tax extenders package would have to be brought to the floor on its own and not as an amendment to other legislative vehicles, so the measure’s fate depends on whether Democrats can win any Republican support to reach the 60-vote threshold to break a filibuster.
The House passed its $115 billion version of the tax extenders bill last May, which included a 34-cent-per-barrel tax for the oil spill liability fund.
HOUSE: NATURAL RESOURCES CHAIRMAN REQUESTS INTERIOR DOCS ON OFFSHORE FIRE
Natural Resources Committee Chairman Rep. Nick Rahall (D-WV) requested to see permits related to Mariner Energy’s Vermilion 380 platform, which caught fire Sept. 2 in the Gulf of Mexico.
In a letter issued Sept. 3, Rahall asked for “prompt attention” from Interior Secretary Ken Salazar in assembling a variety of documents related to the company and its activities in the Gulf, including inspection and non-compliance reports from the Vermilion 380 platform, and e-mail correspondence between the company, its contractors and sub-contractors, and their government overseers.
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement (BOEM) Director Michael Bromwich, who has announced that he will launch an investigation into the fire, was copied on the letter. BOEM made it clear that “the current six-month suspension involves drilling rigs in deepwater and therefore does not apply to this platform.” Mariner’s production platform was operating in about 340 feet of water, much shallower water than BP’s oil rig, which was in 5,000 feet of water.
The three most recent drilling approvals for the Vermilion Block 380, the area where Thursday’s fire occurred, were approved by federal regulators in 1999 and 2000, using categorical exclusions, according to federal mining records. Categorical exclusions are waivers that allow companies to proceed with drilling without having to undergo an in-depth environmental review, the same type of waiver granted for the BP Deepwater Horizon project.
The moratorium is currently scheduled to expire on Nov. 30. Bromwich recently stated there are no plans to extend the moratorium. In August, the Department of Interior restricted its use of categorical exclusions for deepwater drilling while it reviews its National Environmental Protection Act process.
GULF RESEARCH: ESA AND OTHER ORGANIZATIONS WEIGH IN ON INDEPENDENT SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH FUNDING ISSUE
In mid-September, the Ecological Society of America was joined by 13 other professional organizations in sending letters to the Senate concerning the need for maintaining public access to independent scientific research conducted in the Gulf region in the wake of the BP oil disaster. The letter requests that “funding for research of actual or potential industry impacts be available and dispersed from an independent source.”
As part of the ongoing Natural Resource Development Assessment (NRDA), most government research funding is being spent on its own spill damage assessment process while BP is funding research as part of its legal defense in determining how much the oil company will have to pay in fines for restoration.
Many scientists as well as Members of Congress have argued for an independent funding source, separate from the NRDA, to allow widespread coordination throughout the research community and allow studies to be conducted in a timely and more open fashion.
The Senate has introduced, but not yet taken up, legislation to address the oil spill in the form of S. 3663, the Clean Energy Jobs Oil Accountability Act. The multi-society letter also requests that the Senate bill include “additional statutes as needed to ensure that scientists retain their right to independent peer-reviewed study.”
To read the letter, see:
RUSSIA PLANT COLLECTION: ESA, AIBS URGE CONSERVATION
The Ecological Society of America (ESA) and the American Institute of Biological Sciences (AIBS) issued a joint letter this week requesting the Russian government forgo its plans to “bulldoze” the Pavlovsk Experiment Station outside Saint Petersburg. The letter, not only went to Russian President Medvedev, but also to others, including Secretary of State Clinton, Secretary of Agriculture Vilsack, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization and several others.
According to the letter, the planned auction of the research site covers an area containing 5,000 distinct varieties of fruit trees and plants, most of which are extinct or endangered around the world and have been cultivated since 1926. The living collections at the Pavlovsk Experiment Station have been cultivated in part to serve as a type of insurance against future plant diseases or catastrophic events. Specifically, seed banks, germplasm and living plant collections are critical in reintroducing food sources should humanity experience a global food pandemic, because of a new crop disease or widespread drought.
The letter also calls attention to the “precarious” state of science collections worldwide where many suffer from insufficient funds leading to deterioration of facilities and loss of expert staff. In their joint letter, ESA and AIBS recommend that government and non-governmental organizations that fund scientific research increase investments in the physical and human infrastructure of living and non-living natural science collections.
Following a recent audit by a Russian commission, the auction has been postponed, possibly until the end of October according to Russian news reports. The Russian Housing Development Foundation has announced the formation of an independent international commission to evaluate the presence of unique plant specimens housed there.
To read the letter, see: www.esa.org/pao/policyStatements/Letters/Letter%20re%20Vavilov%20Institute%20of%20Plant%20Industry.pdf
PUBLIC COMMENT OPPORTUNITY: NATIONAL CLIMATE ASSESMENT UNDERWAY
The US Global Change Research Program has announced the publication of “US National Climate Assessment Objectives, Proposed Topics, and Next Steps” and requests public comments. The document describes the objectives of the National Climate Assessment (NCA) process, provides an initial outline of the next NCA synthesis report (scheduled for publication in June 2013), and describes the next steps in planning for and implementing the NCA process.
The National Climate Assessment (NCA) is being conducted as part of the Global Change Research Act of 1990, which requires a report to the President and the Congress that evaluates, integrates and interprets the findings of the $2.6 billion federal research program on global change (USGCRP) every four years.
Public comments received on these documents will be evaluated and, if appropriate, used to inform the NCA structure and process. Updates on the NCA structure and process will be posted on the NCA Web site: http://globalchange.gov/what-we-do/assessment
National climate assessments act as a status report on climate change science and impacts. They are based on observations made across the country and compare these observations to predictions from climate system models. The NCA aims to incorporate advances in the understanding of climate science into larger social, ecological, and policy systems, and with this provide integrated analyses of impacts and vulnerability.
The NCA will help evaluate the effectiveness of mitigation and adaptation activities and identify economic opportunities that arise as the climate changes. It will also serve to integrate scientific information from multiple sources and highlight key findings and significant gaps in knowledge.
Comments:
http://globalchange.gov/what-we-do/assessment/notices.
Comments are due no later than 11:59 PM EST, October 8, 2010.
For more information, please refer to the Federal Register Notice at:
http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2010/pdf/2010-22229.pdf or http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2010/2010-22229.htm.
EPA: COMPETITVE GRANTS AWARED FOR GREAT LAKES RESTORATION INITIATIVE
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has begun awarding its competitive grants under President Barack Obama’s Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, which targets the most significant environmental problems in the region. Awards will be published on the multi-agency website at http://greatlakesrestoration.us.
The Great Lakes provide some 30 million Americans with drinking water and underpin a multi-billion dollar economy. President Obama has proposed significant funding as part of his Great Lakes Restoration Initiative since Feb. 2009. The initiative action plan, which covers FY 2010 through 2014, was developed by a task force of 16 federal departments and agencies to implement the president’s historic initiative.
The Great Lakes Restoration Initiative has five primary focus areas:
- Toxic Substances and Areas of Concern
- Invasive Species
- Near shore Health and Nonpoint Source Pollution
- Habitat and Wildlife Protection and Restoration
- Accountability, Education, Monitoring, Evaluation, Communication and Partnerships
The first EPA Great Lakes competitive grants were awarded Sept. 7, 2010. More information on the president’s initiative and action plan: http://www.greatlakesrestoration.us
Sources: ClimateWire, Environment and Energy Daily, The Environmental Protection Agency, Department of Interior, Greenwire, The Hill, The New York Times, Newsweek, The Washington Post, United States Global Change Research Program, USA Today