From Deseret News archives:

Energy bill offers consumers relief at pump

Published: Thursday, May 22, 2008 12:11 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
President Bush and his allies in Congress continue to give us the same recycled rhetoric and disastrous energy policies that they have pushed for the past seven years. Fortunately, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has offered a sensible plan that will actually protect consumers, put America on the path toward a clean energy future and finally put the brakes on the taxpayer-funded giveaways that have been helping fuel Big Oil's record profits.

The bill the Senate leadership introduced, the Consumer-First Energy Act of 2008, will begin to offer consumers hope of real relief from their growing pain at the pump. This bill offers senators the chance to stop writing a blank check to Big Oil and begin to help their constituents. While nothing can bring down gas prices immediately, this legislation will take clear steps to address problems in the market and hasten the process of shifting our priorities toward long-term solutions.

It's time for wind farms, not windfalls. Right now, Big Oil has consumers over a barrel and another fiscal quarter of tens of billions of dollars in profits. This bill will finally shift money from giveaways to polluters to places where it will actually do some good by investing it in clean, renewable energy.

Two years ago Bush said America was addicted to oil, but last week he complained that we just need a bigger fix. The disastrous policies of his administration have allowed the addiction to grow and energy prices to skyrocket.

Story continues below
We were also greeted by the truly ugly last week when Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., introduced S2958, the American Energy Production Act of 2008 (Domestic Energy Production Act, or DEPA). This bill is a business-as-usual package of some of the worst possible energy proposals out there. It calls for more domestic drilling, including the opening of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drills. Drilling in our treasured wild lands won't do anything to ease pain at the pump or create energy independence. Even at peak production, which could take 20 years, the refuge would produce roughly one year's supply of oil. Even the Bush administration admits that the oil would probably only lower gas prices 1 cent in some two decades' time.

DEPA would merely feed our addiction to oil instead of investing in the clean energy solutions we need. As Sen. Reid said in a release last week, "Americans consume 25 percent of the world's produced oil, but our nation holds less than 3 percent of the world's proven oil reserves." The math simply doesn't add up.

Recent comments

Everyone that is saying electricity will go through the roof has not...

Mark | May 28, 2008 at 6:31 a.m.

Mike and John, You need to face up to the reality that the days of...

Mike R | May 23, 2008 at 11:57 p.m.

Mike, get a grip.

Stop name-calling and face reality. Cheap oil...

To Mike R. | May 22, 2008 at 8:01 p.m.

previousnext

Latest comments

Obama to pledge 17% cut in CO2

Reading this blog gives us such relief that America will never turn away from...

Running game key to BYU offense

Ask Bonco. He says execution is the key. No really, he did. He's said it...

Budget cuts won't help in 2011

To Regretful, I'm right there with you. I don't understand how these guys...

Predicting the unpredictable: BYU wins

"There are no mysteries in today's battle between the Cougars and Utes." -...

Is deflation another word for devaluation? It seems to imply that....

Jazz involved in 4-team race

will Utah hang on to the 8th seed in the West? OKC plays HOU at home next as...

Letters: Global warming a plot

Oh, yes, some hacked e-mails completely explain why ice caps are melting,...

I love it when Danny Hazsard writes I often think he must have no life at all...

Letters: No constitutional right

Our founding fathers purposely framed the Constitution to be a flexible...

I can't imagine that subsidizing 100,000+ illegal immigrants and their...

Advertisements