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According to Myron Ebell of the Conservative Enterprise Institute, the “cap-n-trade” bill has been removed from the Senate calendar for now. His note said: After another meeting of Senate Democrats on Thursday, Majority Leader Harry Reid announced that the anti-energy package he plans to bring to the floor next week will not include cap-n-tax. He said that he will be happy to bring cap-n-tax to the floor later in the session if Kerry can produce 60 votes. The package Reid hopes to bring to the floor includes four titles: BP oil spill provisions; energy efficiency measures; natural gas vehicles, especially heavy-duty trucks; and something on the Land and Water Conservation Fund, which is an appropriated trust to buy federal land and turn it into federal land funded from oil royalties. The major item is probably the title on natural gas vehicles and might be called the Boone Pickens Taxpayer-Funded Payoff.
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From The Charleston Gazette
By: Sen. Truman Chafin
NOW, more than ever, we need coal! Tuesday, July 6, electricity demand in the East surged to levels near those in the summer of 2006. With temperatures soaring above 100 degrees in cities from New York to Washington, utilities and grid operators witnessed power output close to the 2006 records. Fortunately, the power grid has been up to the task, thus far.
An engineer at John Amos elaborated that the Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Maryland Interconnection, "PJM", is stressed to near breaking. PJM is near max capacity, and it has been said that the grid may hiccup in the following days due to the extreme heat. One result of this misfortune, would be to shed load and cut off big users, which would essentially cause layoffs to keep the grid from crashing.
The increased demand is straining the system as it is; yet, there is another component that is frequently scrutinized but essential for the grid survival, which is coal.
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By: Rep. Shelley Moore Capito
Through the Environmental Protection Agency, Washington continues to push an anti-coal agenda. It amounts to an assault on an industry that employs more than 500,000 hardworking Americans and supplies nearly half of America’s electricity.
The EPA’s attempts to control climate change through regulation and stall the approval of mining permits can only lead to coal states like West Virginia bearing the brunt of poorly thought-out policies that translate into greater job loss and higher energy costs.
President Barack Obama is intent on passing legislation to cap greenhouse gas emissions. Should Congress fail to act, the EPA will exert its regulatory authority in an unprecedented manner that will have far-reaching effects on nearly every sector of the U.S. economy — from higher prices at the gas pump to skyrocketing utility bills.
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