REPUBLICANS TOUT INNOVATION TO COMBAT CLIMATE CHANGE
Surrounding this week’s failed Senate vote on the Green New Deal, Republicans took to the floor to highlight practical measure to address climate change and expand clean energy that could attract (and has already attracted) bipartisan backing.
“There are some policies that both parties can support that I think can make a real difference in real time,” Murkowski said Tuesday, ahead of the official NELA introduction the following day. “We’re not in a situation, in a place, where we’re doing nothing.”
Last Congress approved legislation expanding the 45Q carbon capture and 45J advanced nuclear incentives, increasing (and in some cases giving record) funding for DOE cleantech R&D, as well as spurring hydropower. “That was just last year in terms of those policies that we put in place that are moving us forward in the right direction,” Murkowski said. “It is important for us around here to make sure that we don’t distract from those pragmatic, practical solutions, that we don’t amp the rhetoric up so high that we can’t get ourselves to the place where we can work cooperatively, collaboratively, to get to these solutions.”
Senate Environment and Public Works Chairman John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) also promised to work with Democrats to “pass meaningful legislation,” noting past and present bipartisan carbon capture and advanced nuclear work.
Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) singled out the NET Power zero-emission natural gas demonstration project near Houston as an example that “you can be pro-energy, pro-innovation, pro-growth and pro-environment.”
Alexander laid out his “New Manhattan Project for Clean Energy”, a five-year project with 10 “grand challenges” that will “use American research and technology to put our country and our world firmly on the path for a cleaner cheaper energy.” Among those 10 challenges include building one or more advanced nuclear reactors, more efficient and lower carbon natural gas combustion technologies, carbon capture (“the holy grail of clean energy”), better and grid-scale batteries and doubling energy research funding for DOE’s Office of Science and the 17 national labs. “This is a bold agenda and hopefully a bipartisan agenda,” Alexander said. His plan earned bipartisan praise from Coons and others at a DOE budget hearing in Alexander’s subcommittee Wednesday.
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