From Deseret News archives:

GOP bills aimed at oil-shale use

Published: Friday, June 27, 2008 12:07 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
But Chase Huntley, energy policy advisor for The Wilderness Society said oil shale development is a "cruel fiction on the American people, promising a false solution to high gasoline prices that instead would hand over potentially tens of thousands of acres of federal lands to oil shale speculators.

"This bill falsely promises that oil shale will lower gasoline prices, when in fact the industry is years if not decades away from proving the economic viability, technical feasibility, and environmental safety of the technologies needed to squeeze oil from rock," Huntley said in a statement.

Huntley said the technology to develop oil shale is not ready and its environmental impacts — particularly how much water it needs to be developed — are not understood.

"Pushing the BLM to finalize rules governing commercial leasing and production of oil shale now is irresponsible," Huntley said.

The Senate bill also includes incentives for plug-in cars or vehicles that would run on batteries and use less gas, something Hatch has been advocating as a way to diversify transportation fuels.

"Some argue we must promote solar, wind, and geothermal as an answer to high gas prices," Hatch said. "Well, obviously, cars and trucks don't run on electricity. But what if we changed all that? Why not use plug-ins to apply hydroelectric, solar, wind, geothermal, and nuclear to our transportation sector?."

Story continues below
Hatch said the electric grid is a domestic resource and much cheaper and cleaner than gas.

Meanwhile, the Republicans from the House Western Caucus introduced the Americans for American Energy Act, which also removes the moratorium from the Interior Department.

Rep. Rob Bishop, R-Utah, introduced the bill standing between two giant "Declaration of Energy Independence" posters playing off the upcoming July Fourth holiday, which caucus members signed.

"Congress should end the tyrannical rule over our nation by hostile foreign nations by encouraging more production of American energy from all of America's bountiful resources," according to the "declaration."

The House bill is more extensive than the Senate one and includes opening up oil drilling in the Arctic Natural Wildlife Refuge. The Senate bill purposely left that proposal out, Alexander said, because some Democrats have problems with it.

But Bishop is glad to see ANWR in the House bill.

"You can't piddle around," Bishop said. "You either do everything or you don't do everything."


E-mail: suzanne@desnews.com

Recent comments

Aldous, please research Shell Oil's 'in-siti' process, there is...

JimC | June 28, 2008 at 6:41 a.m.

Anyone who expects "production of oil from the shale" is...

Aldous | June 27, 2008 at 3:40 p.m.

His name is Lamar Alexander, the senator from Tennessee. I wonder...

readwrite | June 27, 2008 at 2:24 p.m.

previousnext

Latest comments

Has anyone heard about the Bottle Hollow Resort on the Ute reservation?

Budget cuts won't help in 2011

Re Crazy: People arbitrarily decide how much a teacher should make, so it...

No question everything is going BYU's way: the calls, the bounces, the...

This woman speaks the truth....your butt really does look big in those...

Well, sir, I believe there is hope yet for the X, Y and Z generatiosn of...

Modern medicine didn't even exist when this country was founded. Health...

I want to comment on a XM show you did on subliminal suggestions. I recently...

Yes, we Latter-day Saints do indeed celebrate Christmas, in fact, the...

Yes, LDS are fully commissioned officers in the US Armed Forces, and they all...

Davis man sues over Tasering

The police routinely cycle in and out of military units now in the national...

Advertisements