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energy policy

Entrepreneurs Beware: The NFIB Is Wrong on Prop 23

August 9, 2010

I just moved to California two weeks ago, but it didn’t take me long to learn about Proposition 23, big oil’s (aka. Tesaro and Valero) efforts to try and buy overturn — or ‘suspend”— the 2006 landmark state law that mandates big reductions in greenhouse gases, AB 32. It turns out that one of the… Read More…

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Environmental Defense Fund Encourages Grassroots Advocacy for Strong Energy Bill

November 17, 2009

The Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) has offered a list of the 5 most noteworthy actions that clean energy campaigners can take to support a hard-wearing climate and energy bill. The first vital step is to compose letters to local elected government officials urging them to join the cause for a more secure energy policy for America, which will…

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Show Big Coal How It’s Done: Sierra Club’s ‘Liar Liar — Pants on Fire’ Campaign

August 19, 2009

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Image: Sierra Club’s Liar Liar–Pants on Fire Campaign

Environmental issues are usually treated pretty seriously — as they should be; we’re facing some serious problems — but that doesn’t mean we can’t have a little fun, from time to time, with the otherwise oh-so-serious issue of astroturfing — the business of faking grassroots activism. Meet our “Liar Liar–Pants on Fire” campaign.

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Are Environmentalists Killing the Environment?

July 27, 2009

//www.flickr.com/photos/waders/How badly do we want to make progress on climate change? According to today’s Boston Globe, the answer for some in New England is: not badly enough.

Beth Daley writes about the “hard look” that proposed biomass facilities – and biomass technology itself – are getting from area environmentalists and regulators. Add that to the “hard look” many regulators, environmental groups and local NIMBY opponents are giving wind (especially commercial-scale) and transmission lines (needed to interconnect any new renewable capacity) and you are left with: business as usual. Now that is a goal Americans, our politicians and business interests can all get behind – just look at health care reform.

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Californians Still Not Ready for New Offshore Oil

July 27, 2009

offshore oil platform

California State assembly rejects offshore oil, budget still passes

Shortly after winning approval from the California State Senate, a controversial deal that would have allowed the first new offshore oil leases in California state waters in forty years, was rejected by the California State Assembly by a vote of 43-30.

The deal would have revived a lease that had been rejected by the State Lands Commission earlier this year and allow a single oil company, Plains Exploration and Production Company, to bypass the existing public environmental review process and gain access to oil reserves off of the Santa Barbara coast — the site of a massive spill in 1969 that poured 80,000 barrels of crude into the Pacific and onto Southern California beaches, effectively halting the issuing of any new offshore leases in state waters.

Despite improvements in offshore drilling technology, small spills are still fairly routine. In 2007, the oil industry spilled 2,256 barrels of oil, fuels and chemicals, into the oceans off America’s coasts. Even though natural oil seepage rates are much higher, an estimated 1,700 barrels per day off the coast of North America, Californians are still leery of another Santa Barbara.

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Three Ways Obama Wins Republicans on Climate Change

July 24, 2009

Obama\'s Energy didn’t get a sniff in last night’s Obama press conference. That wasn’t really a surprise given the way that health care has elbowed its way into the political spotlight. You can count climate change among the “priorities” now in the shadows. Health care is all touch-and-feel…it plays with everyone.

Climate change? Not so much. If Jon Stewart is snoozing, we know that the rest of America – a goodly percentage of which is far across the spectrum from Stewart and outwardly hostile to climate change arguments – is tuned all the way out. That is partly because climate change, energy and the environment still are considered Birkenstock and granola issues. The Obama operatives that are still engaged on climate change have finally started to tweak the message in a way that might help sell a bill even to science skeptics and the generally apathetic.

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North Carolina Weighs Ban on Mountaintop Wind Turbines

July 21, 2009

Looking at a map of installed wind energy capacity in the U.S., one can easily see that the Southeast does not generate much wind power. Generally speaking this is because states like Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana have a poor wind resource. But in other places, like North Carolina for example, there’s a little more to the story.

In addition to a sub-par resource, political opposition based largely on aesthetics have prevented wind power from taking off in the western part of the state — where the only viable onshore resource exists. And if a bill currently being considered by the state legislature effectively banning large turbines wins approval, wind power won’t be taking off any time soon in the Tarheel State.

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California Budget Deal May Mean New Offshore Oil Drilling

July 16, 2009

Proposed deal would allow first new offshore oil leases in 40 years

The same state budget crisis that could shutter 220 of California’s state parks and beaches, may also open the door for the first new offshore oil leases in state waters in forty years. That is, if a proposal floated in the closed-door state budget negotiations on Thursday wins approval from Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.

If approved, the deal would pave the way for the first offshore oil leases in California state waters since the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill and the California Sanctuary Act. In so doing, it would effectively bypass the current regulatory process for formalizing the leases.

“It would be a complete corruption of the safeguards that Californians have demanded in order to protect the coastlines from oil development,” said State Assemblymember Pedro Nava, via telephone on Thursday afternoon.

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Environmental Groups Sue Over Transmission Corridors

July 13, 2009

transmission lines

A coalition of environmental groups have sued the federal government over the creation of transmission corridors that will perpetuate the use of coal-fired power throughout the West.

The lawsuit (pdf) against the Interior, Agriculture and Energy departments filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California charges that the agencies “created a sprawling, hopscotch network of 6,000 miles of rights-of-way” without:

  • considering environmental impacts;
  • analyzing alternatives;
  • weighing federal policies that support renewable energy;
  • ensuring the corridors’ consistency with federal and local land-use plans, and;
  • consulting other federal agencies or Western states and local governments.

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