Advocates press Congress on renewable energy standard
Jul 29 - McClatchy Washington Bureau
Renewable energy advocates are pushing Congress to include a renewable
electricity standard in a climate bill that was proposed Tuesday in the
Senate, and the idea got a boost this week when 27 Democrats and a
Republican pressed for its inclusion.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Nevada Democrat, has assured his
party that a mandate requiring utilities to obtain a percentage of their
power from renewable resources won't be included this summer's bill, but
that didn't stop the 28 senators, who promoted the mandate's
job-creating possibilities.
"A strong RES (Renewable Energy Standard) will give certainty to clean
energy companies that are looking to invest billions of dollars in the
U.S. to manufacture wind turbines, solar panels and other renewable
energy components," the senators said in their letter to Reid.
Democratic Sens. Byron Dorgan of North Dakota, Mark Udall of Colorado
and Tom Udall of New Mexico spearheaded the effort.
Denise Bode, the chief executive of the American Wind Energy
Association, said that a renewable electricity standard would bring
manufacturing and clean energy jobs to the country. She worried that
legislative delay would derail attempts to spur clean energy job growth.
"If we fail to do this as a country, then we won't get the jobs," Bode
said. "It is a win on every front."
While Reid has said that he doesn't have the 60 votes needed to advance
the climate bill, Bode said that advocates of a renewable electricity
standard have 62 Senate votes for such a mandate.
Bode said that this year, for the first time in five years, coal has
generated more new electricity than renewable sources have. More
alarming, she said, is the pace at which China and the European Union
are encouraging this technology, meaning that manufacturing jobs are
likely to head overseas. And competition with the EU and China, Bode
said, is the reason the United States can't afford politicking with an
energy bill.
Robert Jones, a partner with Alston & Bird law firm, echoed that fear
and said the upcoming campaign season has caused Congress to stall.
"This is an opportunity for the U.S. to be a leader, and we have to
capture that," Jones said.
In 2009, Bode said, 35 new wind plants were built, creating half a
million new jobs. This year, however, that growth is down 70 percent
because the government has yet to pass legislation that would bring
manufacturers to the U.S. for the long term, she said. When companies
buy wind contracts, they tend to do so for 10- to 20-year periods.
The lone Republican fighting for the mandate's inclusion is Kansas Sen.
Sam Brownback, who sat on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources
Committee last summer when it passed requirements that 15 percent of the
nation's electricity come from renewable sources by 2021.
"As we begin consideration of comprehensive energy legislation, it's
essential we include ideas that will help drive our national energy
production in the direction of more clean, renewable energy," Brownback
said in a statement. "In this case, a moderate RES would be an important
step towards a cleaner energy future."
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