So a week ago Politico wrote a piece
including this excerpt which, if you replaced the actors with
Halliburton and free-market groups — you know, groups advocating
less state and more liberty, not those sainted groups advocating
less freedom and more government — you’d find a scandal that the
establishment press wouldn’t let go of until, oh, about November
3.
Closed-door meetings between a select group of
environmentalists and a handful of electric utility executives
may determine the fate of climate change legislation in the
Senate.
Several key figures met Monday night at The Caucus Room
restaurant to hash out a range of issues, from the distribution
of valuable emissions allocations in a utility-only climate
bill to the potential retirement of aging coal-fired power
plants. But the talks ran aground over the air pollution rules.
At the table for industry: Duke Energy President and CEO Jim
Rogers, Exelon Chairman and CEO John Rowe, Dominion Resources
President and CEO Thomas Farrell and PNM Resources Chairman and
CEO Jeff Sterba. Environmental Defense Fund President Fred
Krupp, Natural Resources Defense Council President Frances
Beinecke and David Hawkins, director of the NRDC climate center
and a former Environmental Protection Agency air pollution
director from the Carter administration, represented the
environmental groups.
And, sure enough, today’s Climate Wire has a story opening:
A core group of utility bosses and environmentalists racing to
rescue the fading effort to cap carbon emissions has agreed on
a number of provisions group members hope will prompt Senate
leadership to pursue greenhouse gas reductions at the nation’s
power plants…
“We’re kind of giving them our ideas, suggestions and feedback,
and they will take it for what it’s worth,” another source
said. “We’ll see where it goes.”
The working group has been meeting for more than a week,
convening at Duke Energy’s Washington offices, in the Senate
with key aides, and at least once over dinner last week at the
Caucus Room. Members consist of high-level officials from the
Natural Resources Defense Council, the Environmental Defense
Fund, the Pew Center on Global Climate Change, Duke Energy,
Exelon Energy and others.
No details of the memo were released. But its timing comes as
Reid considers whether he will include a provision capping
utility emissions in a broader energy bill as the chamber faces
an expiring work schedule before the summer recess and fall
elections.
Remember, whenever you rob Peter to Pay Paul, you can always
count on the enthusiastic support of Paul.
David| 7.22.10 @ 2:08PM
I guess if the energy companies were just meeting among themselves to hash this out it would be considered monopolistic and racketeering and would run up against government regulators. But since they are doing it with green energy saviours it is okay.
c. j. acworth| 7.22.10 @ 6:50PM
As I read this post a headline is crawling across the top of my screen: "Senate abandons comprehensive energy bill." Can I breath again?