NEWSROOM

Energy Commission Praises Bingaman–Specter Legislation to Reduce US GHG Emissions

Wednesday, July 11, 2007
 

Major Elements of New Senate Bill Based on 2007 NCEP Recommendations

 

For more information, contact:
Paul Bledsoe   202-637-0400

 

Download the press release here.

 

(Washington, D.C.) - The National Commission on Energy Policy, a bipartisan group of top energy experts from industry, government, labor, academia, and environmental and consumer groups, today offered congratulations to Senators Bingaman, Specter and other cosponsors of mandatory climate change legislation introduced today.  Key elements of the legislation are based on recommendations of the Commission made in April of 2007.

            "Adoption of the Bingaman-Specter Low Carbon Economy Act will convert the United States from a laggard to a leader in the global effort to reduce climate change risks," said John Holdren, Teresa and John Heinz Professor of Environmental Policy at Harvard University, Director of The Woods Hole Research Center, and Commission co-chair. "In addition to limiting emissions, the bill raises revenue needed for deployment of key low carbon technologies, especially carbon capture and storage.  The powerful combination of market prices and ambitious technology incentives will encourage efficiency, increase low carbon energy production, and significantly reduce emissions."

            "The Bingaman-Specter bill is ecologically sound and politically smart.  It offers a strong basis for passing mandatory climate legislation this year.  It is critical that Congress require mandatory emissions reductions as soon as possible, both to begin cutting our own emissions and to encourage nations like China and India to join in an effective international effort to cut emissions," said William K. Reilly, former EPA Administrator and Commission co-chair.  "With this ground-breaking bipartisan legislation now before Congress, there is no reason for further delay."

"The Bingaman-Specter bill is ambitious, calling for deep cuts in U.S. emissions while containing measures to protect the economy in case these cuts prove unexpectedly costly in the near term," said John W. Rowe, Chairman, President and CEO of Exelon Corp.  "Successfully regulating carbon will require a fundamental change in the way we produce and use energy. And that will require a fundamental change in our politics.  Bingaman Specter is an important indicator of what we can accomplish if we move beyond partisan sniping to a bipartisan action."

The Bingaman-Specter bill shares a number of key design elements with those recommended by the National Commission on Energy Policy in its April 2007 Report,  "Energy Policy Recommendations to the President and the 110th Congress."  These include:

 

The National Commission on Energy Policy was founded in 2002 by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and its partners.

 

NCEP Commissioners

 

JOHN P. HOLDREN

Co-Chair
Teresa and John Heinz Professor of Environmental Policy, Harvard University; Director of the Woods Hole Research Center

 

WILLIAM K. REILLY
Co-Chair
Senior Advisor, TPG, Inc.; former Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

 

JOHN W. ROWE
Co-Chair
Chairman and CEO, Exelon Corporation


 

PHILIP R. SHARP

Congressional Chair
President, Resources for the Future; former U.S. Representative, IN


 

MARILYN BROWN
Visiting Distinguished Scientist, Oak Ridge National Laboratory; Professor, School of Public Policy, Georgia Institute of Technology


 

JOHN E. BRYSON*
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Edison International; Chairman, Southern California Edison

 

RALPH CAVANAGH
Senior Attorney and Co-Director, Energy Program,
Natural Resources Defense Council


 

ERROLL B. DAVIS*
Chancellor of the University System of Georgia


 

RODNEY ELLIS
State Senator, Texas

 

LEO W. GERARD
International President, United Steelworkers of America


 

ROBERT E. GRADY*
Managing Partner, Carlyle Venture Partners, The Carlyle Group; former Executive Associate Director of the OMB

 

F. HENRY HABICHT
Managing Partner of SAIL Venture Partners, LLC; former
Deputy Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency


 

FRANK KEATING*
CEO of the American Council of Life Insurers; former Governor of Oklahoma


 

RICHARD A. MESERVE*
President of the Carnegie Institution; former Chairman of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC)


 

MARIO MOLINA
Professor, University of California, San Diego

 

SHARON L. NELSON
Chair, Board of Directors, Consumers Union; former Chief, Consumer Protection Division, Washington Attorney General's Office


 

RICHARD L. SCHMALENSEE*
Professor of Economics, MIT; John C Head III Dean, MIT Sloan School of Management


 

NORM SZYDLOWSKI*
President and CEO, Colonial Pipeline Company

 

SUSAN TIERNEY
Managing Principal, the Analysis Group; former Assistant Secretary of Energy


 

R. JAMES WOOLSEY
Vice President, Booz Allen Hamilton; former Director of Central Intelligence

 

MARTIN B. ZIMMERMAN
Clinical Professor of Business, Ross School of Business, University of Michigan; former Group Vice President, Corporate Affairs, Ford Motor Company

 

* Members have joined the Commission since the release of the December 2004 report, ending the Energy Stalemate: A Bipartisan Strategy to Meet America's Energy Challenges.  NOTE:  All Commissioners participate in their personal capacity, and not necessarily on behalf of the institutions with which they are affiliated above.

 

Download the press release here.