An Energy Throwback
Los Angeles Times EDITORIAL
November 19, 2003
It's clear why Republican leaders in Congress kept their national energy
policy bill locked up in a conference committee room for the last month,
safe from review by the public. Taxpayers, had they been given time to
digest the not-so-fine print in the pork-laden legislation, would have
revolted.
This throwback bill promotes tried-and-failed coal, gas, oil and nuclear
industry programs at the expense of conservation and renewable energy. A
Congressional Budget Office estimate puts the cost of tax credits, loan
guarantees and other giveaways at $31.1 billion though once all of the pork
is weighed, critics say the tab could top $100 billion.
The bill that cleared the House on Tuesday continued the welcome
prohibition against oil and natural gas drilling in the Alaskan wilderness.
But the rest of the bill has a frustrating business-as-usual feel.
Automakers won't be required to increase the fuel efficiency of new
vehicles, and the alternative power industry won't get a needed boost from
a rejected requirement that electric utilities generate 10% of their
electricity from renewable energy sources. Attempts to prevent another
massive blackout by giving federal regulators the muscle to police the
electric generation and distribution industries were stymied by power-rich
states in the Southeast and Northwest.
And it gets worse: Producers of methyl tertiary-butyl ether, or MTBE, the
gasoline additive that is fouling groundwater in California and other
states, get protection from environmental lawsuits aimed at forcing them to
clean up their mess. Cash-strapped cities and states would have to pick up
the MTBE cleanup costs, estimated at $29 billion. Not coincidentally, MTBE
manufacturing plants are clustered in the backyards of Republican
representatives who rode herd on the bill.
Democrats didn't want to be left out of the feeding frenzy; in a bipartisan
effort, two farm-state senators, Tom Daschle (D-S.D.) and Charles Grassley
(R-Iowa), won a costly ethanol subsidy that has the National Corn Growers
Assn. grinning.
How this goody-laden bill came into being is just as ugly. Republicans
wrote the 1,100-page document behind closed doors and dropped it on the
desks of Democrats just 48 hours before the conference committee's final
meeting Monday, in which Democrats attempting damage control lost every
significant vote 7-6 along party lines.
The Bush administration, which earlier ordered Congress to hold the
giveaways to $8 billion, says it will accept the bill regardless of the
cost. The full House rubber-stamped the bill Tuesday, and Senate leaders
are confident they've stuffed enough pork into it to secure needed votes
from Republicans and Democrats alike. Now it's up to senators with a
conscience to reject this legislative monument to waste or to muster and
sustain a filibuster.
Last modified: 19 November 2003
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