U.S. Senate climate deal 'transformative', backers say
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[July 28, 2022]
By Timothy Gardner
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The nearly $370
billion in climate and energy security measures in the budget
reconciliation deal U.S. Senate Democrats struck on Wednesday were
whittled down from previous versions of the bill, but highly praised by
backers of clean energy.
Early versions of the bill had $555 billion in tax breaks for clean
energy such as wind and solar power as well as batteries and nuclear
reactors.
Still, Wednesday's package would cut U.S. emissions 40% by 2030, a
summary released by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer's office said.
The baseline for the cut was 2005, Leah Stokes, a professor of climate
and energy policy at the University of California, Santa Barbara, who
advised Democrats on the bill.
Clean energy backers said it would go a long way toward President Joe
Biden's goal of decarbonizing the U.S. economy by 2050.
"It's an absolutely transformative package," said Stokes. She said the
bill would boost American manufacturing in everything from batteries to
solar energy to electric vehicles and contains the largest environmental
justice investment ever.
Biden, who has faced soaring oil prices and record gasoline prices that
have helped drive inflation to 40-year highs, said in statement the bill
would "improve our energy security and tackle the climate crisis."
Heather Zichal, the head of American Clean Power, a group of renewable
energy companies, said Congress is now close to passing "the biggest
climate and clean energy investment in American history."
Democrats hope to pass the bill by a simple majority in the Senate. The
bill must also pass the House, where Democrats also have a razor-thin
majority, and be signed by Biden.
It contains a "methane emissions reduction program" to cut leaks of the
potent greenhouse gas methane from drilling of natural gas, according to
the summary.
It was not immediately clear if a methane fee many Democrats had wanted
on the emissions that would penalize energy companies for the leaks had
been modified.
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Wind turbines generate power on a farm near Throckmorton, Texas U.S.
August 24, 2018. REUTERS/Nick Oxford
Senator Joe Manchin, a conservative Democrat and the swing vote who
has received more donations from oil and gas companies than any
other lawmaker in recent years, had pushed for companies to not face
the fee if they were unable to build a pipeline to carry the gas to
market.
Manchin said the bill will invest in hydrogen, nuclear power,
renewables, fossil fuels and energy storage.
"This bill does not arbitrarily shut off our abundant fossil fuels,"
said Manchin, who has sought for months to preserve federal oil and
gas leasing projects and natural gas pipelines in talks on the bill.
Democrats, he added, "have committed to advancing a suite of
commonsense permitting reforms this fall that will ensure all energy
infrastructure, from transmission to pipelines and export
facilities, can be efficiently and responsibly built to deliver
energy safely around the country and to our allies."
The measure has more than $60 billion in environmental justice
programs to fight pollution and address public health harms in
disadvantaged communities. It also has $20 billion for
"climate-smart" agriculture practices, the summary said without
providing details.
The bill contains a $10 billion investment tax credit to build clean
technology manufacturing plants for EVS, wind turbines and solar
panels, the summary said.
It also has an estimated $30 billion investment in production tax
credits to accelerate U.S. manufacturing of batteries and wind and
solar power components and critical minerals processing.
(Reporting by Timothy Gardner; Editing by Bradley Perrett and
Michael Perry)
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