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| ENERGY PLAN | |
May 17, 2001 |
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Kwame Holman outlines President Bush's energy plan and the initial reactions. |
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KWAME HOLMAN: The president said conservation is the cornerstone of his plan. PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH: We'll underwrite research and development into energy saving technology. It'll require manufacturers to build more energy efficient appliances. We will review and remove the obstacles that prevent business from investing in energy efficient technologies, like the combined heat and power system I toured this morning.
PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH: The second part of our energy plan will be to expand and diversify our nation's energy supplies. America today imports 52 percent of all our oil. If we don't take action, those imports will only grow. As long as cars and trucks run on gasoline, we will need oil, and we should produce more of it at home. |
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| Coal, nuclear power, oil | ||||||||||||||||||||
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KWAME HOLMAN: The president also wants to enhance electricity transmission by requiring private property be sold to make way for power lines.
KWAME HOLMAN: The Bush plan also would give new tax incentives for investing in alternative energy sources, such as wind power, solar energy, and new technologies to help cars run on non-fossil fuels. Mr. Bush concluded his speech with a message to his critics in the environmental community.
KWAME HOLMAN: But the yelling already had begun outside the St. Paul Convention Center by people protesting the president's well-previewed announcement, and in Washington, major environmental groups also weighed in. |
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| Dirty plan | ||||||||||||||||||||
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GENE KARPINSKI, U.S. Public Interest Research Group: Our message today is clear: President Bush's energy plan is dirty, dangerous, and doesn't deliver for consumers. It's a recipe for more drilling, more spilling, more nuclear waste, more asthma attacks, and more global warming. KWAME HOLMAN: One environmental group even had this ad ready to go on the air. SPOKESMAN: Tell President Bush his energy plan is one we just can't afford. KWAME HOLMAN: At the Capitol, Congressional Democrats responded to the Bush plan by saying it fails to provide solutions for current energy problem.
SEN. TOM HARKIN, (D) IOWA: The administration's budget this year slashes renewable energy research and development by more than a third and substantially cuts funding for energy efficiency technologies. They can say all the nice things they want, but take a look at their budget. Even worse, what little support the administration's putting in renewables, they hold it hostage to drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. KWAME HOLMAN: Democrats also claim the White House is not serious about conserving energy, noting that last month Vice President Cheney called conservation "a personal virtue" but not a solution to the nation's energy problems. But today Congressional Republicans said their party does take conservation seriously.
KWAME HOLMAN: Republicans plan quick action on the president's plan, hoping to pass it out of the Senate by July 4th. |
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