- On June 26, 2009, HR 2454: American Clean Energy and
Security Act of 2009 (ACESA) passed, purportedly "To create clean
energy jobs, achieve energy independence, reduce global warming pollution
and transition to a clean energy economy."
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- In fact, it lets energy polluters raise prices for huge
windfall profits and gives Wall Street a bonanza through carbon trading
derivatives speculation. Catherine Austin Fitts' Solari.com blog explained
it last July in her article titled, "The Next Really Scary Bubble"
is coming, saying:
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- "If you think the housing and credit bubble diminished
your financial security and your community, or the bailouts, or the rising
gas prices did as well, hold on to your hat" for what's ahead. "Carbon
trading is gearing up to make the housing and derivative bubbles look like
target practice," or in other words, be the mother of all scams, courtesy
of administration, House and Senate collaboration with Wall Street and
the energy giants.
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- Now the Senate version - a clean energy bill? Not according
to the Center for Biological Diversity (biologicaldiversity.org) calling
it:
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- "a disaster for our climate and planet. (The Kerry-Lieberman)
proposal moves us one baby step forward and at least three giant steps
back in any rational effort to address the climate crisis. (Their bill)
would entrench our addiction to fossil fuels by offering incentives for
increased oil and gas drilling just days after what appears to be the worst
offshore oil disaster in American history."
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- Their proposal includes "no safeguards....to make
offshore oil safe. (It) echoes greenhouse pollution reduction targets that
scientists recently called 'paltry' and inadequate to prevent the worst
impacts of climate change....The Kerry-Lieberman (bill) is not the answer
because it asks the wrong questions."
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- New climate legislation must:
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- -- reduce "atmospheric carbon dioxide to 350 parts
per million....;"
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- -- supplement "existing environmental laws - especially
the Clean Air Act - instead of gutting these successful and proven environmental
protections;"
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- -- be "free of loopholes allowing polluters to delay
or avoid reducing their greenhouse gas emissions;" and
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- -- avoid "habitat destruction and increased greenhouse
gas emissions through perverse subsidies."
-
- House of Senate bills fail "these tests." They're
"a disaster for our climate and planet." The House bill lets
polluters "escape real emissions reductions." The Senate bill:
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- -- bans Clean Air Act provisions and "existing state
and local efforts to tackle climate change;"
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- -- facilitates, subsidizes, and accelerates oil and gas
drilling, including offshore;
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- -- "subsidize(s) dangerous and costly nuclear energy;
and
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- -- incentivize(s) the destruction of forests for biomass
energy production;" this provision, however, appears stalled.
-
- Last June, Public Citizen called the House bill:
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- "a new legal right to pollute (that) gives away
85 percent of (its) credits to polluters. (It) will not solve our climate
crisis but will enrich already powerful oil, coal and nuclear power companies"
at the expense of consumers stuck with higher than ever bills to enrich
them.
-
- This writer's July 8 article titled, Obama's Cap and
Trade Carbon Emissions Bill: A Stealth Scheme to License Pollution and
Fraud explained it -
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- www.sjlendman.blogspot.com/2009/07/obamas-cap-and-trade-carbon-emissions.html.
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- Hyperbolic Democrats praised it, Speaker Pelosi calling
it "transformational legislation which takes us into the future"
after taking congratulatory calls from Obama, Senate Majority Leader Harry
Reid and Al Gore.
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- The former vice president has long-standing ties to Goldman
Sachs (GS), and in 2004, he and David Blood, GS's former asset management
division CEO, co-founded Generation Investment Management LLC, a firm likely
to profit hugely from cap and trade schemes if enacted.
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- So will energy giants like Royal Dutch Shell (top-ranked
in 2009 on Fortune's Global 500) and Duke Energy that helped write the
bill, that according to Friends of the Earth President Brent Blackwelder
"fails to come anywhere close to solving the climate crisis. Worse,
(it) eliminates preexisting EPA authority to address global warming - that
means it's actually a step backward."
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- Greepeace agreed saying it "sets emission reduction
targets far lower than science demands, then undermines even those targets
with massive offsets. The giveaways and preferences in the bill will actually
spur a new generation of nuclear and coal-fired power plants to the detriment
of real energy solutions."
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- Energy companies praised it, and why not. Big Coal got
a waiver until 2025. Agribusiness was exempted altogether even though it
contributes up to one-fourth of greenhouse gas emissions. The free allowances
provision benefits the nuclear industry hugely. The nation's largest nuclear
power company, Exelon, said it would reap a $1 - 1.5 billion annual windfall
from subsidies and higher prices.
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- ACESA is a scam. It's about profits, not environmental
remediation. Its emissions reduction targets are so weak, they effectively
license polluters by giving them a new profit center to exploit. As for
Wall Street, it offers greater than ever derivatives trading profits -
a new multi-trillion dollar market to be "securitized, derivatized,
and speculated," according to Clinton's former Commerce undersecretary,
Robert Shapiro. If cap and trade becomes law, the market will explode in
his judgment.
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- Others agree, seeing a speculative bonanza, why FIRE
sector (finance, insurance and real estate) lobbyists spent a record $465
million in 2009 according to the Center for Responsive Politics. Energy
and natural resources companies also, spending $409 million to assure a
plum this sweet becomes law.
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- The American Power Act (APC) - Unveiled on May 16 and
now available in Pdf form at:http://kerry.senate.gov/americanpoweract/intro.cfm.
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- It's as hyperbolic as the House version saying:
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- It "will transform our economy, set us on the path
toward energy independence and improve the quality of the air we breathe.
It will create millions of good jobs that cannot be shipped abroad and
it will launch America into a position of leadership in the global clean
energy economy."
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- It claims not to be about enriching Wall Street, but
to reduce carbon pollution by "17 percent in 2020 and by over 80 percent
in 2050," so far ahead that who'll remember unmet targets.
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- It says:
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- -- "Consumers will come out on top.
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- -- We need energy made in America.
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- -- America needs to regain its competitive edge....
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- -- We need a new approach to reducing emissions (and)
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- -- The system must be simple, stable and secure."
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- Friends of the Earth President Erich Pica debunked it,
saying:
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- "Without dramatic improvements, this bill should
not be passed, and senators should consider alternatives. In the meantime,
existing tools like the Clean Air Act must be put to work. More broadly,
we must end a system in which polluter lobbyists exercise effective veto
power in Congress. Our economy, global security and the health of the public
are all at stake."
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- According to Public Citizen's Tyson Slocum in his May
13 analysis, APC fails across the board saying the "Climate Bill Is
a Misnomer: It's a Nuclear Energy-Promoting, Oil-Drilling-Championing,
Coal Mining-Boosting Gift to Polluters....with a weak carbon-pricing mechanism
thrown in."
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- Worse still, it guts the EPA's authority to regulate
greenhouse gases as pollutants under the Clean Air Act. It provides nuclear
power incentives at taxpayers expense. Under sections 1101 and 1105, citizens
won't have public hearings on nuclear power risks, especially ones in their
communities. Section 1102 "increases loan guarantees primarily for
nuclear power to a jaw-dropping $54 billion." Considering the industry's
high default risk, consumers will be stuck with the bill the way they've
paid trillions for Wall Street bailouts.
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- In section 1103, 12 proposed nuclear plants will get
$6 billion in taxpayer-subsidized risk insurance. Section 1121 lets nuclear
power operators accelerate depreciation. Section 1121 "provides a
10 percent investment tax credit for new reactors." Under section
1123, the industry gets Advanced Energy Project credits, and it "derives
certain tax, bond and grant benefits from investing in nuclear power"
from sections 1124, 5 and 6.
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- More than ever, Big Oil gets to "Drill Baby, Drill"
(that assures "Spill Baby, Spill"), including more of it offshore,
despite the spreading Gulf disaster, and there's more. Under section 1202,
states may keep 37.5 of oil and gas royalties. "That's like saying
because more rich people live in California and New York compared to Mississippi
and New Mexico, (they) should be able to keep more federal dollars raised
from income taxes. Royalty revenue sharing is patently unfair," especially
since offshore spills respect no state shorelines or inland areas if they
spread.
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- Big coal will get generous loan guarantees and more.
"Section 1412 establishes a (utility-collected) carbon tax paid by
ratepayers....to fund carbon capture and storage (CCS) - with no money
allocated to rooftop solar or energy efficiency investments." Under
section 1431, coal companies are given (taxpayer subsidized) emissions
allowances - "an untested, risky strategy that benefits (them) and
is gobbling up a lion's share of subsidies" that should go for renewable
energy development.
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- Merchant coal power plants (whose rates aren't regulated)
will get about 5% of the handouts, "which will provide opportunities
for them to gouge consumers."
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- Section 1604 says because "voluntary" renewable
energy markets are efficient and effective programs, "the policy of
the United States is to continue to support" them without the guarantees
given fossil fuel and nuclear industry giants.
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- The bill also promotes carbon offsets trading - a scam
to let polluters buy credits from countries or companies whose greenhouse
gas emissions fall below their allowed quotas. However, shifting isn't
reduction. It simply transfers pollution from one place to another, has
no verification mechanism, creates a system wide open to fraud and mismanagement,
and allows the same market manipulation shenanigans that created the housing
and toxic derivatives bubbles - precisely why energy giants and Wall Street
want it.
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- Utilities, not consumers, will benefit from free 2013
- 2029 allowances, "exclusively" for ratepayers purportedly.
But instead of remitting directly to them, the Senate bill lets state utility
commissions decide. They, in turn, can be more or less consumer friendly,
but as their past history shows, ratepayers will end up losers.
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- As for Wall Street, the Senate bill is marginally less
accommodative than the House version, but not enough to matter. For example,
a new Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) Office of Carbon Market
Oversight is created, letting the corporate-run agency regulate spot and
futures emission markets.
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- It would require emissions traders to register, be approved,
and have their transactions cleared through a CFTC-run Carbon Clearing
Organization. It'll work the same way the Federal Reserve regulates banks
- by letting the giants that own it make the rules.
-
- Further, carbon trading lets Wall Street "control
our climate future" by "mak(ing) the housing and derivatives
bubbles look like target practice," as Catherine Austin Fitts explained.
-
- If cap and trade is enacted, polluters will win. Consumers
will lose, and Wall Street will get the mother of all speculative bonanzas.
No wonder, they and the energy giants are lobbying ferociously for passage.
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- Connection to the Gulf Disaster
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- On May 9, Attorney General Eric Holder told ABC's This
Week that he sent Justice Department officials to the Gulf to determine
if any "misfeasance (or) malfeasance" occurred.
-
- Is the Senate climate bill perhaps connected to the Gulf
spill? - being used as a pretext to propose "protections," including
a provision saying:
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- "Mindful of the accident in the Gulf, we institute
important new protections for coastal states by allowing them to opt out
of drilling up to 75 miles from their shores. In addition, directly impacted
states can veto drilling plans if they stand to suffer significant adverse
impacts in the event of an accident."
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- Don't bet on it, as House and Senate bills, in fact,
assure more, not less, offshore drilling, thus far prohibited in oil rich
waters Big Oil companies covet. But what they want, they generally get,
free from regulatory oversight or not enough to matter. That won't change
nor the chance for more spills, on or offshore. As one expert explained:
"As long as we keep using this stuff, we're going to be spilling it.
It goes with the territory."
-
- Yet if the Gulf incident was deliberate, why so? On September
30, S. 1733: Clean Energy Jobs and American Power Act was introduced, purportedly
to "create clean energy jobs, promote energy independence, reduce
global warming pollution, and transition to a clean energy economy."
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- On November 5, it was reported to the Senate Environment
and Public Works Committee, remained stalled, and the December Copenhagen
climate summit (COP 15) failed. Then after the April 20 Gulf incident,
it was reactivated to take advantage of a good crisis - what White House
Chief of Staff Rahm Emmanuel once told the Wall Street Journal saying:
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- "You never want to let a serious crisis go to waste.
What I mean by that is that it's an opportunity to do things you thought
you couldn't do before."
-
- And a joint Kerry-Lieberman statement said ahead of the
bill's rollout:
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- "We are more encouraged today that we can secure
the necessary votes to pass this legislation this year in part because
the last weeks have given everyone with a stake in this issue a heightened
understanding that as a nation, we can no longer wait to solve this problem
which threatens our economy, our security and our environment."
-
- White House climate advisor, Carol Browner, told Bloomberg
TV that:
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- "This accident, this tragedy, is actually heightening
people's interest in energy in this country and in wanting a different
energy plan."
-
- Perhaps they, BP, Transocean and Halliburton know something
we don't. In this case a possible false flag "accident" to jump-start
passage of the Senate bill to enrich polluters and Wall Street, the only
way they may have thought possible after Senate debate stalled.
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- Of course, to enlist enough public and congressional
support, a headline-making incident was needed, though doubtful one this
grave was intended - according to some experts spewing from 40,000 - 100,000
gallons daily to continue for months, even years given the enormous underwater
pressure at a one-mile depth - 40,000 pounds per square inch, the reason
fixes so far tried have failed, and no one's sure what'll work. The latest
BP tube insertion may be more a PR stunt than a solution, but don't look
for its officials or Washington to explain it.
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- Extremely worrisome are the enormous deep water oil plumes,
one, for example, 16 km long, five km wide, and 91 meters thick, suggesting
permanent ecological damage with untold consequences. Already, oxygen in
the Gulf is depleting, threatening sea life over a vast area and the livelihoods
of area fishermen.
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- As for the industry's likely cost, it's pocket change,
especially as others (including Washington and perhaps the states), not
the offenders, will pay the most. Consider the Exxon Valdez disaster.
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- It occurred in March 1989. After years of litigation,
plaintiffs got $385 million in compensatory damages and $5 billion in punitive
ones. However, after numerous appeals, the Supreme Court (in June 2008)
reduced the latter ones to $500 million - ten cents on the dollar or the
equivalent of about 1.5 days profit from Exxon's Q 1 2008 operations, or
hardly enough to matter.
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- As for Prince William sound and its residents, its beaches
are still contaminated. The high-pressure hoses did more harm than good.
They destroyed interlocking layers of gravel and flushed away fine sediments
that protect beach areas, clams and mussels during storms. As many as 300,000
seabirds were killed plus other wildlife.
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- A Trustee Council study found 17 of 27 monitored species
haven't recovered. Bio-accumulation of toxins affected the killer whale
population. Clams are inedible from hydrocarbon poisoning. Shellfish damage
slowed the recovery of otters that feed on them. The herring never returned.
Salmon caught have abscesses and tumors, and the lives of about 32,000
plaintiffs were permanently disrupted economically, emotionally and culturally
by bankruptcies, alcoholism, suicides, family violence, and divorces. And
today the area still smells like a gas station and perhaps will for decades.
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- As for enacting Senate energy legislation, falsely called
a climate bill, the battle lines are now drawn, including for offshore
drilling, but given its importance to Big Oil, expect heavy-lifting lobbying
for passage, whether or not this year. Whatever happens, expect the public
to lose out to powerful corporate interests, especially energy and Wall
Street ones spending millions to assure it.
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- Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com
and listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the
Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network Thursdays
at 10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs
are archived for easy listening.
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- http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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