E2-Wire

  April 12, 2010, 7:02 am

E2 Round-up: A push to bolster mine safety regulations, climate talks grind on, a big power sector deal, and fears about uranium enrichment

By Ben Geman

* The Department of Labor is eyeing new powers for mine safety regulators.

Labor Secretary Hilda Solis is seeking to give mine safety regulators more authority following the West Virginia coal mine explosion that killed 29 workers. One area officials are exploring is whether the Mine Safety and Health Administration should be granted subpoena power, Solis tells the New York Times in an interview.

“We know that there are some areas of the law that probably could be strengthened, and so we’re going to be reviewing those areas — for example, looking at powers to subpoena,” she said. “We don’t have the authority to shut down a mine as easily and as quickly as the public might think, and I think those are the loopholes that we want to close.”

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  April 12, 2010, 6:00 am

Crunch time for climate change bill

By Ben Geman

The Senate trio crafting a compromise global warming bill are under pressure to gain the traction needed for floor action this year.

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  April 9, 2010, 4:59 pm

T. Boone Pickens heads to Capitol Hill for energy tax hearing

By Ben Geman

Over at our On The Money blog, my colleague Jay Heflin reports that oil magnate and wind energy advocate T. Boone Pickens will travel to Capitol Hill next week. Pickens will be a witness at a House Ways and Means Committee hearing on energy tax policy.

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  April 9, 2010, 4:10 pm

Massey responds to safety questions

By Jim Snyder

Massey Energy released the following statement in response to news reports that have noted a history of safety citations at Massey's Upper Big Branch mine, where an explosion Monday killed at least 25 miners.

    * The safety of our members has been and will continue to be our top priority every day. As we have always done in the past, we will conduct extensive reviews of the Upper Big Branch (UBB) accident and work in every way possible to ensure that a similar incident doesn't happen again.

    * We do not condone any violation of Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) regulations, and we strive to be in compliance with all regulations at all times.

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  April 9, 2010, 3:12 pm

Environmentalists praise Stevens, the author of landmark climate case

By Jim Snyder

Environmentalists praised retiring U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens as a champion of environmental protection.

Stevens, who announced Friday he would retire this summer, wrote the majority opinion in the landmark case Massachusetts V. EPA. The decision granted federal regulators the authority to force greenhouse gas emissions reductions if the pollution posed a threat to human health and welfare.

“Justice Stevens was a resounding voice on behalf of the Constitution, the rule of law, including environmental protection laws, and the rights of citizens to bring legal challenges against corporations and federal agencies,” said Erich Pica, president of Friends of the Earth, a petitioner in the Mass. v EPA case. Read more...

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  April 9, 2010, 2:03 pm

Climate hearing gives members first chance to question coal safety laws after deadly blast

By Jim Snyder

A hearing next week on coal and climate change is likely to offer members of Congress the first chance to question industry executives about mine safety since at least 25 miners were killed in an explosion Monday.

Executives from Peabody Energy, Arch Coal and Rio Tinto are expected to testify before the House Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming on Wednesday. Officials from Massey Energy, the operator of the mine where the blast occurred, are not expected to attend.

The principal focus will be on “coal’s role in a new energy age,” said spokesman Eben Burnham-Snyder. But members are also expected to ask questions about the explosion on Massey’s Upper Big Branch mine, the deadliest in 25 years, and mine safety laws in general. 

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  April 9, 2010, 1:24 pm

Nelson presses Gates on whether drilling plan would harm military training

By Ben Geman

Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) is seeking a meeting with Defense Secretary Robert Gates to discuss whether White House plans to allow expanded drilling in the eastern Gulf of Mexico would impair military training there.

Nelson, in a letter to Gates Thursday, said he wants to hear from Gates about whether the plan “poses a risky commercial intrusion into the last unfettered training range for our military.”

Nelson won provisions in a 2006 Gulf drilling law that created a no-drilling buffer generally extending 125 miles south of the Florida panhandle and 235 miles west of Tampa.

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  April 9, 2010, 11:28 am

Stupak’s retirement to leave void on energy market oversight

By Ben Geman

Rep. Bart Stupak’s (D-Mich.) decision to retire means the House will lose its most outspoken advocate of expanding regulation of electricity, natural gas and oil trading markets.

Stupak has long pushed to give the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission a stronger hand to clamp down on market abuses and limit speculative energy trading by Wall Street banks and hedge funds.

“Bart Stupak was the point man in the House for restoring regulatory order to these out-of-control markets,” said Tyson Slocum, director of Public Citizen’s energy program. “His leadership is going to be sorely missed.”

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  April 9, 2010, 10:27 am

Kerry knocks World Bank coal loan

By Jim Snyder

The man at the center of an effort to draft climate legislation that can pass the Senate took a swipe at the World Bank on Friday for approving a $3.75 billion loan to build a coal plant in South Africa.

“There are better ways to promote urgent energy access in the developing world without exacerbating the looming threat of catastrophic climate change which will ultimately hit Africa and the developing world the hardest,” Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) said in a statement released Friday morning.

“Moving forward, the World Bank should be leading the way by leveraging its funding and broad expertise to promote new, low carbon footprint energy sources that mitigate climate change.”

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  April 9, 2010, 8:30 am

E2 Round-up: Mine escaped tougher enforcement despite safety violations, states fight to keep climate plans, being anti-nuclear when everyone else is talking about a renaissance

By Jim Snyder

* Mine operator had “pattern of violations” but escaped stepped-up enforcement.

The New York Times leads with this report on the mine disaster in West Virginia: “The operator of the West Virginia mine that exploded on Monday, killing at least 25 people, was warned by federal officials just over two years ago that it could be cited for having a 'pattern of violations,' which would have allowed far stricter federal oversight of the mine. But the mine escaped the stepped-up enforcement even though it continued to amass violations, federal records show.”

The Mine Safety and Health Administration had warned Massey Energy in a 2007 letter that “the mine had received 204 violations that were deemed serious and significant over the previous two years, well above average,” according to the Times.

Massey implemented a plan to fix the problems and the violations went down, but the incidents rose again last year, according to the newspaper.

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