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CLINTON/GORE ON NATIONAL ENERGY POLICY
For twelve years, the Republicans in Washington
have undermined our national security and cut short
our economic growth because they haven't had a
national energy policy. In the last decade, 8,000
of our independent oil and gas producers have
closed their doors; 300,000 Americans have lost
their jobs. Of 4,500 domestic drilling rigs
operating in the United States in 1981 when Ronald
Reagan and George Bush took office, less than 700
remain in operation today. We've fallen behind our
competitors in energy efficiency and are in danger
of leaving future generations of Americans in a
precarious position of overwhelming debt and
dependence.
America needs a new national energy policy that
enables Americans to control Americas energy
future. Instead of coddling special interests
whose fortunes depend on Americas addiction to
foreign oil, the Clinton/Gore national energy
policy promotes national security, energy
diversity, economic prosperity, and environmental
protection.
It's time to make the right energy choices.
Increase energy efficiency and conservation
- Increase corporate average fuel economy
standards from the current 27.5 miles per
gallon to 40-45 miles per gallon.
- Develop and implement revenue-neutral market
incentives that reward conservation and
penalize polluters and energy-wasters.
- Adopt transportation strategies and highway
spending programs that encourage car-pooling,
high-efficiency highway technology, and mass
transit by including conservation incentives
in the federal matching fund program.
- Promote changes in utility regulation to make
energy efficiency profitable for both
utilities and customers.
- Strengthen federal programs to encourage
energy-efficient housing, and to encourage
state and local governments to adopt building
codes that encourage conservation by calling
for thicker walls and windows, new compact
florescent bulbs, more efficient insulation
and new low-cost housing construction that
could cut domestic energy consumption by 25
percent using measures that would pay for
themselves in 5 to 7 years.
- Increase energy efficiency in every federal
agency and set standards to insure that
federal grants, contracts, and projects
support Americas national conservation goals.
Increase natural gas use
- Implement policies to expand markets for
natural gas in every sector homes, businesses,
industry, electrical generation, and
transportation.
- Speed development and certification of new
natural gas pipelines to get natural gas to
market, with special emphasis on areas not
currently adequately served by natural gas.
- Convert the enormous federal vehicle fleet to
natural gas.
- Use federal research and development dollars
to develop new natural gas applications.
Expand the use of renewable energy sources
- Create a civilian advanced research agency
that will support civilian research and
development of renewable technologies and
renewable fuel programs.
- Reorient the mission of hundreds of national
laboratories, moving from defense R&D to more
work on commercial renewable energy projects.
- Change the tax code to create greater
incentives for renewable energy use.
- Give incentives to utilities to adopt least
cost planning, which factors environmental,
social and economic costs into fuel-use
decisions. Least-cost planning is currently
employed by utility companies in 17 states.
A safe, environmentally sound energy policy
- Oppose increased reliance on nuclear power.
There is good reason to believe that we can
meet future energy needs -- with conservation
and the use of alternative fuels -- without
having to face the staggering costs, delays
and uncertainties of nuclear waste disposal.
- Oppose federal excise gas tax increases.
Instead of a back-breaking federal gas tax, we
should try conservation, increased use of
natural gas, and increased use of alternative
fuels.
- Prohibit drilling in the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge in Alaska: work to expand the
ANWR to include the 1.5 acre Arctic Coastal
Plain while ensuring that Native Americans are
able to use these lands for traditional
subsistence hunting and fishing. Increased
energy efficiency and the use of natural gas
currently available in the lower 48 states can
easily negate the need for ANWR drilling.
- In Governor Clinton's first term in 1979, he
created a state Department of Energy which
emphasized renewable resource development,
reduced institutional barriers to energy
conservation and encouraged the development of
new energy sources.
- Established an Alternative Fuels Commission.
- Arkansas ranks 10th in the nation in energy
research spending.
- Gore amendments enacted by the Senate as part
of the 1992 energy bill:
! Help small businesses increase their
energy efficiency and cut their energy
bills by establishing energy diagnostic
centers where engineering students and
their professors can work with small
businesses.
! Accelerate the government's efforts to
procure the most energy efficient
products and to provide grant money to
states to fund energy efficiency and
conservation initiatives.
! Require the Tennessee Valley Authority of
conduct least-cost planning analyses of
energy supply and demand requirements.
! Provides assistance to states to develop
energy conservation and renewable energy
initiatives.
- Senator Gore was a leader in the successful
efforts to kill provisions that would have
allowed drilling in the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge.
- Led efforts in the 1991 Interior
Appropriations for solar and renewable joint
venture programs.
- Senator Gore introduced legislation to involve
America's national labs in developing and
disseminating energy efficient technologies
and practices.