Obama discriminated against coal,
nuclear: U.S. energy secretary
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[October 25, 2017]
CAPE
TOWN (Reuters) - The United States discriminated against the nuclear and
coal industries under the administration of former President Barack
Obama, U.S. Secretary of Energy Rick Perry said on Wednesday. |
Former U.S. President Barack Obama campaigns in support of Virginia
Lieutenant Governor Ralph Northam, Democratic candidate for governor, at
a rally with supporters in Richmond, Virginia, U.S. October 19, 2017.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst |
"Nuclear and coal ... Those two industries were discriminated
against over the course of the last administration," Perry told
reporters at an oil conference in Cape Town, when asked about a
U.S. government directive to support ageing coal and nuclear
plants.
The directive would reward certain nuclear and coal-fired plants
that store 90 days of fuel on site for contributing to the
reliability of the national grid.
U.S. industries that rarely agree, including gas drillers and
renewable energy producers, oppose it on the grounds that it
props up "uneconomic generation."
Asked about threats to U.S. energy supplies, Perry, a former
governor of the oil hub of Texas, cited cyber security as the
main concern followed by natural disasters such as hurricanes.
(Reporting by Ed Stoddard; editing by Jason Neely and Adrian
Croft)
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