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Tag Archives: Waxman-Markey

Coal Losing Steam

Coal Losing Steam

It is abundantly clear that if we are going to conquer our climate change demons, then we’ve got to radically reduce the burning of coal on our splendid but increasingly stressed planet.  Carbon dioxide is still the primary driver of warming and coal is still the primary source of carbon dioxide from fuel combustion. Of […]

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Renewable Electricity Standard?

Renewable Electricity Standard?

You remember the Waxman-Markey bill – The American Clean Energy And Security Act.  It passed in the House of Representatives in June of 2009.  Oh well, the Senate – being the Senate – allowed the historical moment to pass.  In this case, the cowardice, political cynicism and utter lack of clear thinking has been a […]

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The Catastrophe in the Senate – More Punditry

The Catastrophe in the Senate – More Punditry

I might more accurately call this post The Catastrophe of the Senate, but that won’t get us anywhere – for the moment.  In any event, as you know by now, the concatenation of Republican anti-environmentalism and fear (and no doubt loathing), plus intransigence from Democratic Senators from states where coal and oil are king, has […]

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The Climate Bill in the Senate

The Climate Bill in the Senate

(Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid with Senator John Kerry and Director of the White House Office of Energy and Climate Change Policy Carol Browner during a media conference in Washington. Photo: AP) If you follow the climate and energy story, I’m not telling you something you don’t know – or couldn’t have predicted:  the US […]

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Climate and Security

Climate and Security

I mentioned my visit to the local British Consulate-General yesterday and some discussions there.  I also mentioned the enviable climate and energy politics across the pond in “Oh, to be in England” a while back.  The three major parties in the UK have had their differences, but as can be evidenced by the new coalition’s […]

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American Power Act

American Power Act

To tell you that I haven’t been skeptical about the value of a weak Senate climate and energy bill would be lying to you.  For one thing, I’m pretty happy with how the EPA has been approaching the regulation of greenhouse gases.  I’d hate to see strong programs like this and the Regional Greenhouse Gas […]

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Making the Case for GHG Reductions

I had a good time the other night talking about climate change policy and politics with Amanda Little on The Hyperbole Hour. We’re on the same wavelength.  (You can download the show as an mp3 file and listen in from around 29 minutes.) One of the points we made was that we really need to […]

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Obama and Copenhagen

I have not been, like most of the rest of the climate change cognoscenti, writing nonstop about Copenhagen this week.  I have been working on reviewing thesis work from students in the MS in Global Affairs program at NYU where I teach on climate change.  I’ve had one blockbuster thesis on how to make the […]

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Anteing Up

Anteing Up

If you play poker you know that all the players have to ante up with a stake before each new deal.  You have to “feed the kitty” – or you don’t play.  Perhaps not coincidentally, parties that have an interest in a particular project, enterprise or, in the case of COP 15, addressing the looming […]

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The State of Play – Domestic Division

As you know, there has been a tremendous amount of activity on climate change and energy on The Hill over the past year.  The House of Representatives got going fast, even before the 111th Congress got underway.  A leading progressive, hardball-playing Congressman from Los Angeles, Henry Waxman, assumed the chairmanship of the critical Energy and […]

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The Gas Industry at the "FT"

In yet another useful special report at the “Financial Times” – this one today on the gas industry – there are two articles on the theme of what I was talking about recently in which natural gas is being positioned as a “transition” fuel to the low-carbon future.  (See Natural Gas – to Cut GHG […]

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Clean Energy Jobs and American Power Act

Senators John Kerry and Barbara Boxer introduced the Senate’s version of climate change and energy legislation today.  See this for information on the background of the bill and the working draft itself.  I won’t go into an analysis right now.  (I’ll be getting on that soon, along with about 5,000 other commentators.)  You’ll fershur be […]

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SPQR

SPQR

Senatus Populusque Romanus – The Senate and the People of Rome.  The old Roman Senate was, on paper, representative of the people.  Because the US is a representative democracy, the US Senate was meant, up to a certain point, to perpetuate this same principle.  It was, however, certainly less representative, from Day One, than its […]

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Critical Meeting – Major Economies Forum

I’ve written several times about the Major Economies Forum on Energy and Climate (MEF) convened by President Obama to seriously address the critical international negotiations this year.  Most of the governments that contribute 80% of the total GHG emissions have been engaged since April in extensive discussions.  The leaders of the MEF countries will be […]

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ACES Up

We were away for several days (see post below), otherwise I would’ve further deluged you with information on the passage of the landmark American Clean Energy and Security Act (H.R. 2454), aka ACES, beyond what you may already have been experiencing.  I should, of course, weigh in with my humble opinion.  My first impulse, given […]

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