Colorado Companies Blast Murkowski’s Bid to
Block EPA on Greenhouse Gases

feature photo Republican Senator from Alaska, Lisa Murkowski
Print

Send to a Friend:










Email Larger Smaller

By David O. Williams

Sen. John D. Rockefeller, D-W. Va., yesterday introduced legislation to impose a two-year moratorium on the EPA effort, which was first unveiled by EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson in December. Some accused Jackson at that time of gunning for big polluters like stationary coal-fired power plants to give the Obama administration more ammo headed into United Nations climate change talks in Copenhagen.

The U.S. House passed a climate change bill last summer, but the Senate version has been stalled. In January, Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, floated a disapproval resolution aimed at forcing Senate debate on whether the EPA should be able to impose penalties on big polluters.

Just this week Murkowski, the ranking member of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, pressed Jackson during a hearing of the Senate Interior and Environment Appropriations Subcommittee, demanding to know whether she preferred a regulatory path or a cap-and-trade solution approved by Congress.

“The Clean Air Act was written by Congress to regulate criteria pollutants, not greenhouse gases, and its implementation remains subject to oversight and guidance from elected representatives,” Murkowski said in a release. “We should continue our work to pass meaningful energy and climate legislation, but in the meantime, we cannot turn a blind eye to the EPA’s efforts to impose back-door climate regulations with no input from Congress.”

Colorado critics say Murkowski and coal-state Democrats like Rockefeller are pandering to entrenched fossil-fuel-based power sources and mining interests at the expense of a growing clean-energy sector like the one currently booming in Colorado.

“We are very concerned that the dialogue that Murkowski is supporting has the priorities wrong: Investing in climate solutions is profitable and creates jobs,” said Paul Sheldon of Natural Capitalism Incorporated, a Longmont-based consulting business. “Investing in energy efficiency and renewable energy could generate $440 million in economic development in Colorado and as many as 20,000 new jobs.”

Others say climate change legislation or at least letting the EPA enforce the Clean Air Act as ordered by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2007 goes far beyond mere economics and verges into public health.

“Coal is a particularly dirty and harmful fuel source, both because of its disproportionate contribution of greenhouse gases to the problem of global warming, and because of its production of numerous other air pollutants and environmental toxins,” said Dr. Roberta M. Richardson, president of Colorado-based Physicians for Social Responsibility.

Source: Colorado Independent

Get Colorado Energy News and alerts as they happen:
Enter Email:

Post a Response