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American Clean Energy and Security Act
Fri Dec 18, 2009 at 17:13:42 PM PST
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The USDA's assessment of the House climate change bill (H.R. 2454, the American Clean Energy and Security Act, a.k.a. ACES) was just released. Here's a short summary of the 80-page report (below). Also check out Tom Vilsack's statement on the report.
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Fri Jul 03, 2009 at 10:02:54 AM PDT
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A friend sent me an e-mail she received from the Iowa Farm Bureau. Excerpt:
Mary Kay Thatcher, AFBF director of public policy, tells Agriculture Online that Farm Bureau doesn't anticipate the massive climate change bill passed by the House last week to pass the Senate this year.
And the New York Times reported Tuesday that opposition from Farm Bureau and other agricultural groups threatens to kill the bill in the Senate. The Times reports that groups such as AFBF wield greater clout in the Senate, because members there must be protective of an entire state, rather than a small congressional district.
Here are the links to the Agriculture Online piece and the New York Times article.
You may recall that the Farm Bureau Federation lobbied members of the U.S. House to vote for Collin Peterson's lousy amendments to the Waxman-Markey American Clean Energy and Security Act but against the bill intended to address climate change.
I have my own problems with the ACES bill, especially the deals made to appease the coal industry and Peterson's colleagues on the House Agriculture Committee. That said, the objections big agribusiness and their Congressional allies have raised against the cap-and-trade approach are off-base and short-sighted.
It wouldn't surprise me if Farm Bureau's vote-counter is correct and the Senate rejects the Waxman-Markey bill for the wrong reasons. Frankly, that might be better than letting senators like Claire McCaskill make this flawed bill even worse.
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Fri Jun 26, 2009 at 11:29:41 AM PDT
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The American Farm Bureau is telling members of Congress to vote yes on Collin Peterson's amendment to the Waxman-Markey American Clean Energy and Security Act (ACES) but no on the bill as a whole.
In a letter sent today to all 435 members of the House, AFBF President Bob Stallman said H.R. 2454, the American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009, will "unquestionably impose enormous costs on the American economy, including agriculture."
An AFBF economic analysis shows that at a minimum, net farm income will decline by $5 billion annually by the year 2020, if H.R. 2454 is passed.
"The $5 billion impact is under the most optimistic set of assumptions," Stallman said. "Those estimates do not begin to tell the story of what will happen when the program mandated by this legislation fully takes hold." [...]
Stallman praised Peterson's effort to improve the bill and urged passage of his amendment because it incorporates provisions that are critical to American agriculture.
"The Peterson amendment establishes an agricultural offset program within the U.S. Department of Agriculture; provides for a list of eligible agricultural offsets; corrects the misuse of indirect land use calculations in evaluating the use of biofuels; and alters the definition of biomass," Stallman explained.
I have a lot of trouble supporting the ACES bill myself, because as written it seems more like a pretend solution to a problem than a real effort to combat climate change. That said, Farm Bureau is taking the worst possible position: supporting an amendment that undermines the bill without supporting the overall goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
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