When the House of Representatives started working on a clean energy bill last winter, we were optimistic. After all, our country had just come off an election in which a large majority voted for bold change and the candidate who most strongly supported clean energy. Congressional leaders were promising to pass a bill to keep the climate stable, provide us with a secure energy future, and create millions of new jobs that could revitalize our economy.
But then lobbyists from polluting corporations showed up and hijacked the process. A coalition that includes Shell Oil, the coal-burning utility Duke Energy, and other corporate polluters, as well as some environmental groups, produced a proposal around which much of the bill was based, and K Street lobbyists further weakened the bill as it moved through the legislative process. After many of these lobbyists were satisfied, the bill -- known “Waxman-Markey,” because it was sponsored by Congressmen Henry Waxman and Ed Markey -- passed the House on June 26.
The bill now showers polluting corporations with hundreds of billions of dollars, but doesn't require them to reduce pollution fast enough to avoid devastating climate change impacts. Worse, the bill guts the EPA’s preexisting authority to use the Clean Air Act to reduce this pollution. And it contains massive carbon offset loopholes that would allow U.S. polluters to keep polluting by paying for often-pretend pollution reductions overseas.
This means the bill is counterproductive -- that enacting it into law would in some ways actually be a step backward.
Fortunately, we can fix this bill in the Senate. Senators plan to begin considering their version of the bill in a matter of weeks, and they have the ability to show lobbyists the door and fix the House bill’s flaws.
Friends of the Earth and more than 300 allied groups agree that senators must do the following:
Friends of the Earth and more than 20 allied groups completed a detailed analysis of the draft bill introduced in the Senate on September 30 by Senators John Kerry and Barbara Boxer.
Our shared analysis shows that the Kerry-Boxer bill improves upon the House bill in one critical area: It protects the existing tools we have to reduce greenhouse gas pollution under the Clean Air Act. In all the other criteria laid out above, however, the bill still needs to be improved. We are sharing this analysis with Senator Boxer to provide her and other senators with a blueprint for strengthening the bill.
Senators need to hear from all of us that we demand a strong clean energy bill, not the lobbyist-corrupted, loophole-filled bill that passed the House. Click here to sign our petition and send them that message, and then ask your friends to sign too. Also, ask your friends to view our video, "Just an Energy Bill," an animated video telling the story of how polluter lobbyists hijacked the energy bill.