Sign up for free to get the latest from greenbang direct to your inbox
 
Home | Research Store | Work With Us | Events | Insight | Press | About | Newsletter | Contact

Texas to EPA: don’t mess with us

Published Friday, 28th November 2008

Where some see going green as a new opportunity to create jobs and grow new industries, Texas Gov. Rick Perry sees a threat to his state’s way of doing business.

Citing the possible harm to his state’s economy, the Republican governor this week urged the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) not to adopt new regulations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

“The EPA is making plans to re-interpret the Federal Clean Air Act in ways that were never contemplated when this law was passed and will cripple the Texas economy,” Perry said. “The methods under consideration by the EPA will punish innovation, cost jobs and drive investment out of Texas and overseas.”

In a letter to EPA administrator Stephen L. Johnson, Perry claims the EPA’s proposed regulations would raise costs and create time-consuming bureaucratic requirements for “large swaths” of the economy while having “negligible effects on worldwide concentrations of greenhouse gas emissions.”

Rather than adopt the proposed changes to the Clean Air Act, Perry said, the federal government should modernize the nation’s electrical grid, eliminate barriers to nuclear power development, promote the development of carbon capture and sequestration technologies, and provide long-term tax and regulatory measure to support energy efficiency and renewable energy development.

Perry makes the case that, when it comes to developing wind energy facilities, Texas has done more than any other state and even most countries. However, his letter also offers a somewhat in-your-face assessment of his state’s contribution to U.S. energy:

“Texas is the nation’s leading energy producer, supplying 20 percent of the nation’s oil production, one-third of the nation’s natural-gas production, a quarter of the nation’s refining capacity and nearly 60 percent of the nation’s chemical manufacturing,” he writes. “Simply put, Texas fuels the nation.”

Or, as the state’s slogan puts it, “Don’t mess with Texas.”

Bookmark and share:
  • Twitter
  • Google Bookmarks
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Digg
  • Slashdot
  • del.icio.us
  • email
  • Print
  • PDF




Please note: Comment moderation is enabled and may delay your comment. There is no need to resubmit your comment.












RELATED NEWS

Latest Insight

Colorado welcomes world’s largest concentrating PV power plant thumbnail

Colorado welcomes world’s largest concentrating PV power plant

With the opening of the Alamosa Solar generating facility, Colorado is now home
10 things you should know about smart-meter radio waves thumbnail

10 things you should know about smart-meter radio waves

The rollout of smart meters around the world continues to encounter various objections.
World scientists to G8: Focus on energy, water, disaster risks thumbnail

World scientists to G8: Focus on energy, water, disaster risks

There’s the G8, the G20 and, now, the G-Science. In advance of the

LATEST REPORTS
1

Who’s the leading smart-city brand?

More than half of the world’s nearly seven billion people now live in urban areas, and that proportion is expected to reach almost 69 per cent by 2050. To avoid pushing local and global systems to the point of collapse, cities will need to become much smarter and more efficient Read more ...
more info
2

Managing the smart-grid data overload

Developing the UK’s smart-grid infrastructure will require communications and data technologies that can manage far more information than utilities must handle today. That’s the focus of a strategy report from Greenbang Research: “Enabling the UK’s smart-grid future: The wireless spectrum debate.” The report answers such questions as: Should dedicated Read more ...
more info
3

Incentives fire up UK solar market

The introduction of the feed-in tariff (FIT) incentive policy on 1 April has sparked an explosive reaction in the UK renewable energy market with solar leading the way in installations, according to a new Greenbang research report titled, “The UK’s Feed-in Tariff: Impact, response and market trends for the decade Read more ...
more info