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Today,
we’re all facing
the painful
reality of
skyrocketing
prices at the
pump. In the
Congressional
District I
represent, the 5th
Congressional
District in
Eastern
Washington,
families,
farmers and
small business
owners are
struggling to
pay to fill up
their cars,
tractors and
trucks.
Worldwide the
demand for
energy is
increasing
rapidly.
Several
countries that
used to export
natural gas have
started to
import, which
affects the
price farmers
pay for
fertilizer. In
fact, the price
of natural gas
rose more than
400% between
2002 and 2005.
In the 1950’s
America was one
of the leading
exporters of
oil. Today, we
import nearly
two thirds of
it. Yet, since
that time, we
have done little
to prepare for
our country’s
current or
future energy
needs. And we
are suffering
the
consequences.
Energy is
critical to our
social, economic
and national
security. We
can and we must
start meeting
American energy
needs with
American
resources. It
is time that we
begin saying yes
to American
energy. We
need a
comprehensive
energy
solution. Right
now in Congress,
we’re debating
how to move away
from foreign
oil, produce
more of our
energy here at
home, and
decrease our
carbon
emissions.
And these are
all great goals
– I support
them. But the
reality is, we
need an adequate
energy supply –
today – at an
affordable
price. That
means unlocking
the energy
supplies
available to us
today that
include
petroleum and
natural gas
sources in
places like ANWR
and on the Outer
Continental
Shelf. If
carbon emissions
are the problem,
we should look
for ways to
sequester that
carbon.
Secondly, we
need to
recognize the
hydroelectric
dams in the
Pacific
Northwest
provide us with
an abundant
supply of clean,
affordable, and
renewable
energy.
That
clean, renewable
hydropower has
kept the
Northwest's
"carbon
footprint" at
half that of the
rest of the
nation. Removal
of the Snake
River dams would
add 5.4 million
tons of CO2 to
the atmosphere
each year.
Another
renewable source
of energy comes
from our
national forests
– but that
energy is off
limits. There
is a perfect
example of that
in Eastern
Washington.
Avista Utilities
opened the first
wood-fired
energy plant of
its type in
Kettle Falls in
1983. The plant
uses wood chips
and debris from
mills and
salvaged trees
following forest
fires. Using
that waste wood,
the plant has
generated at
least 6.3
million
megawatts of
power since
1983. When I
visited the
plant in
November, it was
shut down
because there
wasn’t enough
available wood
waste to operate
the plant,
despite being
located next
door to the
Colville
National
Forest. Why?
We can’t salvage
burned timber,
or trees the
bark beetles are
killing. So,
operators of the
plant in Kettle
Falls must haul
wood debris from
250 to 300 miles
away.
Seventy-five
percent of the
fuel they burn
comes from
Canada.
Congress says it
wants to
encourage
alternative
energy,
including
biomass, such as
this project.
But the energy
bill passed in
Congress last
year prohibits
any biomass from
our federal
forests.
Congress needs
to provide
incentives – not
put federal
forests off
limits.
Third, it means
cutting the red
tape to make the
permitting
process easier
and bring more
sources of
energy online,
whether it is
wind, solar,
biomass or
nuclear. When I
chaired the task
force to update
and reform the
National
Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA),
I learned the
average time
frame for
obtaining a
permit to
produce natural
gas has
tripled. I
learned the NEPA
process has
caused some
producers to
wait more than
10 years to get
approval to
market clean
natural gas.
Virtually every
attempt to tap
new sources of
clean natural
gas on federal
lands has been
met with
expensive, time
consuming and
frivolous legal
challenges. We
need to make
some changes.
And finally, we
all have a role,
in conserving
the energy we
already have, as
we look for
energy sources
of the future.
The largest
source of energy
we already have
is the energy we
waste every
day. In homes
today, many of
us have replaced
our old 60-watt
light bulbs with
the new coiled
bulbs. If every
household in
America did
that, we’d save
enough energy to
power a city of
1.5 million
people.
I am excited
about the next
generation of
fuels being
developed –
across the
nation, and in
Eastern
Washington. In
the Pacific
Northwest,
innovation is
leading the way
for the
development of
many new
alternative
energy sources.
Right now wind
farms in
Washington State
generate enough
power to supply
more than
400,000 homes
with
electricity.
Whether it’s oil
sands, wind, the
development of
liquid coal,
bio-diesel,
hydrogen fuel
cells, nuclear
power or solar
energy all of
these sources of
energy decrease
our dependency
on foreign oil
and create new
markets,
stimulate the
workforce, pass
energy savings
to the public,
and help
contribute to
American energy.
It is time we
meet our growing
energy demands
with American
energy – and no
is not an
answer.
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Cathy McMorris
Rodgers
represents the 5th
District of
Washington in
the U.S. House
of
Representatives.
She is the
Ranking
Republican on
the Natural
Resources
Subcommittee on
Water and Power.
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