Energy & Environment

  October 24, 2012, 4:00 pm

Better bee health begins and ends with science, not soundbites

By Barbara Glenn, CropLife America

Earlier this month, scientists, regulators, beekeepers and others gathered in Alexandria, Va., for the National Stakeholders Conference on Honey Bee Health. The meeting, co-sponsored by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), focused on the latest findings and information regarding challenges to honey bee health around the world.
 
In recent years, honey bee losses in the United States, as measured by beekeepers each spring, have been higher than historical averages. Although there is much speculation as to the reasons for this decline in honey bee health, many causative factors may be involved and scientists from government, academia and industry are intensifying their search for answers.

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  October 24, 2012, 12:00 pm

Rethinking and reforming our energy policy

By Michele Combs and Brian Smith, Young Conservatives for Energy Reform

As Election Day gets closer, a growing number of young conservatives are urging political leaders to make energy reform a national priority.



That’s why Young Conservatives for Energy Reform recently co-sponsored a reception in Washington, D.C. We want Republicans inside the Beltway to know what we are hearing outside the Beltway. At meetings and events we’ve held across the country over the past several months, young conservatives have told us that we need a new approach to energy in this country. To us, it’s not a partisan issue. It’s an American issue.



As Lt. General Richard Zilmer (Ret.) of CNA’s Military Advisory Board put it at our D.C. event, our over-dependence on oil makes our nation weaker. We send nearly a billion dollars a day overseas to pay for oil. Some of that money ends up in the hands of people who wish to do us harm. This puts us in the position of funding both sides of the war against terrorism. And that’s a position we can’t afford to be in.



Our oil addiction also comes at great cost to our military - both in blood and in treasure. Every $10 increase in the price of a barrel of oil costs the Department of Defense over $1 billion dollars, leaving taxpayers to foot the bill. And on the battlefield, the need for oil puts our troops’ lives in greater danger, because our enemies often target fuel convoys. In fact, an Army study found that 1 in 24 fuel convoys results in an American casualty in Afghanistan.



For young conservatives, these costs are unacceptable. And we believe adopting an “all-of-the-above” and “Made in America” approach to energy is the solution. That means reducing our over-dependence on oil, becoming more energy efficient, and developing homegrown energy sources such as natural gas, solar, wind, and biofuels.



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  October 23, 2012, 4:00 pm

Small modular reactors provide path forward for nuclear power

By Nick Cunningham, policy analyst, American Security Project

Earlier this month, I took a tour of the Calvert Cliffs nuclear power plant, located on the shores of the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland. A two-unit, 1700-megawatt power plant, Calvert Cliffs generates about one-fifth of the power needs for the entire state of Maryland, or equivalent to the electricity demand for the city of Baltimore. We saw the generators, peaked into the control room, viewed video of the spent fuel pools, and discussed some of the safety features needed to keep the plant safe.

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  October 23, 2012, 3:30 pm

Leveraging our American energy revolution

By Bill Cooper, president, Center for Liquefied Natural Gas (CLING)

American ingenuity and technological advances have unlocked a vast supply of domestic natural gas, more than enough to meet the needs of our country for generations to come. The economy and the environment are already benefitting from this affordable and abundant supply of clean-burning fuel, including the lowest CO2 emissions levels since the mid-1990s and a cost savings of more than $560 million per day for consumers and businesses. According to a study by Bank of America Merrill Lynch, domestic natural gas production has actually helped prevent us from falling into another recession.
 
But what if we could continue to enjoy these benefits while also creating more jobs and more economic growth?

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  October 22, 2012, 11:00 am

An opportunity to debate climate change

By Dan Thompson, University of California, Berkeley

270 minutes. That's how long the leading candidates for president and vice president have stood on stage in front of the American people without mentioning a challenge as big as the national debt, education, health care, and national security: climate change.

It's not that they haven't had plenty of opportunities.

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  October 19, 2012, 12:00 pm

EPA's war on consumers, affordable electricity and jobs

By Rep. Glenn Thompson (R-Pa.)

Over the past year, we’ve heard a lot about the Obama Administration’s ‘War on Coal’. The White House has been quick to dismiss the notion, pointing to their “all-of-the-above” energy policy. They’ve attributed the demise of coal-fired power in part to the record-low prices of natural gas. While most agree that the coal industry has faced challenges, especially under current economic conditions, the argument that people are shutting down coal power plants because gas is cheaper just doesn’t hold water.
 
Why? Coal is by far the cheapest source of electricity. So if cost isn’t the reason, what is?

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  October 18, 2012, 3:45 pm

Americans' desire for domestic energy is rooted in economics

By Roy Willis, president and CEO, Propane Education and Research Council (PERC)

It’s no surprise that at this time of great decision, the nation is sharply divided on our current energy path. But while the nation disagrees on the details, it is wholeheartedly united in the desire for political leaders to guide us toward a solution. And I see that as very encouraging.
 
I also see that as a clear mandate for whoever is in office next.
 
These observations are supported by results from “2012 Energy Habits, Awareness & Perceptions,” a national survey recently conducted by Harris Interactive and funded by the Propane Education & Research Council (PERC) to gauge the current public opinion about domestic energy and green living practices. Some of the most interesting findings were on the subject of domestic energy:

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  October 18, 2012, 1:30 pm

The Clean Water Act turns 40 today

By Gregory E. DiLoreto, P.E. president-elect, American Society of Civil Engineers

The Clean Water Act is 40 years old today and the nation should celebrate the accomplishments of this landmark legislation.

As we near the end of 2012, we can look back and say we’ve made remarkable progress on cleaning up the nation’s waters.

Forty years ago, people were afraid to swim or fish in our waters, our lakes and our rivers. And quite frankly, we didn’t have the resources to address the issue.

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  October 17, 2012, 4:30 pm

Sierra Club's toxic campaign

By David Jenkins, vice president of government and political affairs, ConservAmerica

This election season, the Sierra Club has rolled out a campaign called “Toxic Money, Toxic Votes” that identifies six Republicans it claims are “toxic candidates” who allow oil and coal money to influence their votes.

Despite the proverbial chicken and egg problem in trying to prove cause and effect with political donations, this campaign might not be so bad if the Sierra Club had actually targeted candidates who are well known to be close allies of oil and coal. It didn’t. The organization had entirely different criteria. All six of the Republicans it targets are battling in tight campaigns listed in the Cook Political Report as “toss-up” races against Democrats.

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  October 17, 2012, 9:00 am

Time for the U.S. to address its mineral dependence problem

By Daniel McGroarty, president, American Resources Policy Network

Access to critical minerals and metals is vital to America’s militarystrength and economic health. As we move further forward into the technology age, we need a range of non-fuel minerals – from antimony to zinc – for defense technologies that protect the homeland and project American power abroad. These same minerals and metals underpin our manufacturing sector too, and the cost of raw materials impacts everything from productivity and innovation to economic growth and job creation.

Without smarter policies that increase access to resources under our own soil, America will continue to depend heavily on China, Russia, Kazakhstan, and other countries that don’t have our interests at heart.

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