Maryland Senate urged to pass ‘black liquor’ bill as win-win for state consumers, environment and jobs

For Immediate Release
March 27, 2013

Contact:
Kelly Trout, 240-396-2022, kelly@chesapeakeclimate.org
Tom Carlson, 651-587-0730, tom@chesapeakeclimate.org

Environmental leaders call SB684/HB1102 a common-sense, must-pass bill that will close a costly loophole in Maryland’s clean electricity standard while creating jobs and reducing toxic air and climate pollution

ANNAPOLIS—Maryland’s environmental community is calling on state senators to seize the opportunity to dramatically improve the state’s core clean electricity law today when SB 684, the so-called “black liquor” bill, gets its third reading on the Senate floor.

The bill would close a massive loophole in the state’s Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS) law that is shoveling millions in Maryland ratepayer dollars to old, out-of-state paper mills for burning “black liquor,” a carbon-intensive waste byproduct. After a critical compromise was struck that will protect in perpetuity the only Maryland paper mill that burns black liquor, Luke Mill, SB 684 passed the Senate Finance committee by a bipartisan, 9-2 vote.

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Enviros decry Virginia tax on hybrid cars

The Hill

By Keith Laing

Environmentalists are unhappy with Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell (R)’s decision to retain a tax on hybrid vehicles in a transportation funding plan for the state.

McDonnell reduced the amount of the tax from $100 per year to $64, his office announced on Tuesday.

But the Chesapeake Climate Action Network (CCAN) said he should have removed the entire tax.

“While Gov. McDonnell bent to public outcry and reduced the hybrid car tax, he should have vetoed it altogether, as thousands of Virginians urged,” CCAN Virginia State Director Beth Kemler said in a statement. “The hybrid tax remains an unfair and unreasonable policy. A $64 fee is just as arbitrary as the whole policy is to begin with.”

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Gov McDonnell keeps punitive hybrid tax, defying public outcry

For Immediate Release
March 26, 2013

Contact: Beth Kemler, 804-335-0915, beth@chesapeakeclimate.org

RICHMOND—Beth Kemler, Virginia State Director at the Chesapeake Climate Action Network, issued the following statement in response to news reports that Governor McDonnell will keep the annual hybrid car tax alive, amending it to $64 a year:

“While Governor McDonnell bent to public outcry and reduced the hybrid car tax, he should have vetoed it altogether, as thousands of Virginians urged. The hybrid tax remains an unfair and unreasonable policy. A $64 fee is just as arbitrary as the whole policy is to begin with.

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Senator Warner: Stand with Virginians, Not Big Oil!

When Virginia Senator Mark Warner decided to flip his stance on the tar sands pipeline, Virginians were ready to march to his door and let him know that if he claims to be a leader on climate change, he cannot support the Keystone pipeline!

Yesterday, over 20 climate activists, including students and constituents from across the state, stormed Warner’s Richmond office to voice their outrage over his recent support for the KXL.

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Climate activists urge Warner to reject pipeline

Richmond Times-Dispatch

By Markus Schmidt

About a dozen climate-minded activists rallied outside Sen. Mark R. Warner’s Richmond office on Main Street on Monday, urging the Democrat to vote against the proposed Keystone XL tar sands pipeline.

Warner recently told President Barack Obama that he supports the pipeline but hopes the project’s construction can be tethered to more effective energy efficiency policies.

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1,136 Voices Against the Hybrid Tax

Each new General Assembly session is bound to bring its fair share of surprises. Chief among this year’s list was the truly shocking (and downright absurd) proposed $100 annual tax on hybrid and electric vehicles. I literally laughed out loud when I first heard of this proposal last November. The tax was heavily debated but ultimately became buried within an enormous transformation reform bill that narrowly passed both the House and Senate. The bill now sits on Gov. McDonnell’s desk. I, along with 1,136 of you, urge the governor to veto this poorly contrived component of the bill.

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Virginians rally at Sen. Warner's office ahead of Keystone XL vote

For Immediate Release
March 18, 2013

Contact:
Kelly Trout, 240-396-2022, kelly@chesapeakeclimate.org; Molly Haigh, 907-750-1999

Dozens of Students, CCAN, 350.org, EAC join forces to demand Warner oppose toxic pipeline

RICHMOND, VA—With a vote on the proposed Keystone XL tar sands pipeline looming in the US Senate, dozens of concerned Virginians rallied outside Sen. Mark Warner’s office today to demand that he vote against the project. While the senator has been vocal about his concern for climate change in the past, constituents wanted a guarantee that he stands with them in opposing a toxic pipeline top climate scientists have referred to as “game over for the climate.”

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Cap and Dividend Policy Update #33

From the Chesapeake Climate Action Network, Mike Tidwell, Director

Compiled and edited by Ted Glick, National Campaign Coordinator

March 15, 2013

The Chesapeake Climate Action Network supports efforts to advance the policy known as “cap and dividend,” first introduced by Senators Maria Cantwell (D-WA) and Susan Collins (R-ME) in December, 2009. Since that time, this bipartisan approach has continued to attract interest and coverage. CCAN continues to produce and distribute this occasional newsletter to keep the clean energy community updated on those developments.

Click here to view past Cap and Dividend Policy Updates.

 

In This Issue:

#1 Sanders and Boxer introduce ‘fee and dividend’ climate bill; greens tickled pink, by Lisa Hymas

#2 George Shultz Presses Congress to Act on Climate Change, by Ashley Southall, N.Y. Times

#3 The Politics of Climate Change Legislation, from Harvard Magazine

#4 Draft Bill Released by Rep. Waxman and Sen. Whitehouse Would Price Carbon and Reduce Emissions, from Climate Progress

#5 In wake of Democratic proposal, House GOP to float resolution condemning carbon tax, Jean Chemnick, E&E

#6 Battle lines forming on carbon tax, by Carolyn Lochhead

#7 Could Republicans ever support a carbon tax? Bob Inglis thinks so

#1 Sanders and Boxer introduce ‘fee and dividend’ climate bill; greens tickled pink, by Lisa Hymas

“’Under the legislation, a fee on carbon pollution emissions would fund historic investments in energy efficiency and sustainable energy technologies such as wind, solar, geothermal and biomass. The proposal also would provide rebates to consumers to offset any efforts by oil, coal or gas companies to raise prices.’ It’s what green wonks call a ‘fee and dividend’ bill. The Chronicle describes it as a ‘variant on a carbon tax.’ Boxer, who chairs the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, says she intends to move the legislation through her committee and to the Senate floor by this summer. Many greens will be rallying behind her, but how many fellow senators will?”
For the full article go to: http://grist.org/climate-energy/sanders-and-boxer-introduce-fee-and-dividend-climate-bill-greens-tickled-pink/

#2 George Shultz Presses Congress to Act on Climate Change, by Ashley Southall, N. Y. Times, March 8

“George P. Shultz, a former Republican cabinet secretary, seems an unlikely figure to fight for climate change, which is largely the political turf of Democrats. But climate change was exactly why Mr. Shultz, who is best remembered as Ronald Reagan’s secretary of state, came to Washington on Friday. . . he said that Congress should pass a fee-and-dividend carbon tax that would remit revenues to consumers. The tax would be revenue-neutral, covering the cost of research and development for alternative energy sources without generating extra income for the government.”
For the full article go to: http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/03/08/george-shultz-presses-congress-to-act-on-climate-change/

#3 The Politics of Climate Change Legislation, from Harvard Magazine

”Theda Skocpol said she felt there was plenty of passion in the environmental movement—but stressed that even though members of the Tea Party are also passionate about their causes, ‘The Tea Party is not built on passion.’ What might move Americans in general, she argued, is something that will actually benefit them: a cap with a dividend returned to citizens. During the closing moments of the question-and-answer session that concluded the symposium, Mike Tidwell, director of the Chesapeake Climate Action Network, shared his experiences of talking to citizens ‘in church basements.’ Rarely do people get behind something they support, he said; usually they act to block something they don’t like. But people ‘do get excited’ about the idea of cap and dividend. Conservative Nebraska farmers know about climate change, and they don’t ‘get’ cap and trade, he explained. They do get cap and dividend, he said, calling that approach ‘the inevitable solution.’
For the full article go to: http://harvardmagazine.com/2013/02/environmentalist-failure-to-pass-cap-and-trade

#4 Draft Bill Released by Rep. Waxman and Sen. Whitehouse Would Price Carbon and Reduce Emissions, from Climate Progress, March 12

“Today, legislators from the House and Senate responded to the President’s call. Representative Henry Waxman (D-CA), Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), Representative Earl Blumenauer (D-OR) and Senator Brian Schatz (D-HI) released a discussion draft of a bill that would charge polluters for the carbon pollution they release into the air, reducing the pollution responsible for climate change. It suggests a price of $15-30 per ton of carbon dioxide, which is sufficient to significantly reduce pollution. The bill collects the fee from midstream entities that already report greenhouse gas pollution data to the government, so it creates no large new bureaucracy. The draft also seeks comment on the best ways to spend the revenue, including consumer protection and deficit reduction.”
For the full article go to: http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2013/03/12/1706331/draft-bill-released-by-rep-waxman-and-sen-whitehouse-would-price-carbon-and-reduce-emissions/

#5 In wake of Democratic proposal, House GOP to float resolution condemning carbon tax, Jean Chemnick, E&E, March 13

“While the Scalise-Barton resolution demonstrates the long odds a carbon tax would face in the GOP-controlled House, former Rep. Bob Inglis (R-S.C.) said members of his party might eventually come to accept such a policy, but only if all of the revenue were returned to the U.S. economy. ‘We’re grateful that [Waxman and Whitehouse] have included the only viable option, which is a 100 percent return of the revenue to taxpayers,’ Inglis said in a brief interview, calling any carbon tax that would spend money on government programs — as Cardin suggested — a ‘nonstarter. . . On the conservative side, I believe this must not be about feeding and growing and shielding the government, but about fixing a market distortion and then returning the revenue to the taxpayer,’ he said.”

#6 Battle lines forming on carbon tax, by Carolyn Lochhead

“For a political non-starter, a carbon tax is generating an awful lot of activity on Capitol Hill. On Wednesday, the conservative Republican Study Committee is holding a press conference to slam the idea, headlined by Texas Reps. Joe Barton and Jeb Hensarling and Louisiana chair Steve Scalise, with star billing to anti-tax activist Grover Norquist. What’s catching people’s attention is the ‘fee and dividend’ carbon tax that is remitted back to consumers as a big check each year, based on Alaska’s Permanent Fund. Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) is co-sponsoring a version with Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT); former Secretary of State and Treasury George Shultz, a Californian who served under Ronald Reagan, promoted the idea on Capitol Hill last week. NASA climate scientis
t James Hansen is also a huge backer, saying that putting a price on carbon may be the only way to prevent catastrophic climate change.
For the full article go to: http://blog.timesunion.com/capitol/archives/181432/battle-lines-forming-on-carbon-tax/

#7 Could Republicans ever support a carbon tax? Bob Inglis thinks so, by Brad Plumer, Washington Post

“If you ask Bob Inglis of the Energy & Enterprise Initiative, he thinks Republicans can be persuaded to come around on a carbon tax. It will just take time. And Inglis, a former Republican congressman from South Carolina, thinks he knows just how to sell the idea. Inglis starts with the notion that conservatives will only accept a tax on carbon emissions if the revenue is used to cut taxes elsewhere — say, corporate taxes or income taxes. ‘We have to be absolutely clear that we’re not trying to grow the size of government,’ he says. And the environmental pitch has to be calibrated just so: ‘We’re not talking about regulations or EPA action,’ he adds. ‘All we’re talking about is accounting for the true cost of the fuels we use. And I should mention that we’re not talking about apocalyptic visions of climate change. All we’re talking about is reasonable risk avoidance, the kind that our friends in the insurance industry are now taking cognizance of.’”
For the full article go to: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/03/14/could-republicans-ever-support-a-carbon-tax-bob-inglis-thinks-so/

 

CCAN encourages readers of the Cap and Dividend Policy Update to distribute it to others who might be interested. We welcome input on the contents of this publication and ideas for what could be included. Send to Ted Glick at ted@chesapeakeclimate.org.

Marylanders tell General Assembly to “Get to Work” on fracking protections

The following blog post was originally posted under the title, “dear legislators…” on the ClimateHoward Blog: http://climatehoward.wordpress.com/. It was written by Elisabeth Hoffman.

So, we are taking stock. On the downside: The fracking moratorium legislation for Maryland fell one vote short of getting out of its Senate committee during this General Assembly session.

On the plus side: The Senate committee at least voted. And the vote was sooo close.

And, we are not going away. Or giving up.

That was the message from more than 150 concerned Marylanders at yesterday’s rally in front of the State House in Annapolis. In the pointed words of Mike Tidwell, Chesapeake Climate Action Network’s director, we told legislators: You had better “get to work” to protect communities, the environment and the climate from fracking.

The rally, organized by CCAN, included parents and grandparents, college and high school students and teachers (including a group from Glenelg Country School in Howard County), a couple of babies in backpacks and strollers, nurses and other activists, and Western Maryland residents who live in areas that would be drilled or where natural gas compressor stations are planned.

One of the biggest lessons of the day, though, came from Lois Gibbs, who organized her Love Canal neighbors in the late 1970s when toxic waste buried under their homes and schools started making people sick.

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'Black liquor' deal goes sour

The Baltimore Sun

By Tim Wheeler

A deal environmentalists thought had been worked out to stop mostly out-of-state paper mills from cashing in on Maryland’s renewable energy law by burning so-called “black liquor” has come unglued. The state’s only paper plant in Allegany County has backtracked on a pledge not to oppose the move in return for being allowed to keep collecting from the state’s utility customers for another five years.

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