WASHINGTON – Senators from both parties issued strong objections
Thursday over what they view as the Obama administration’s failure to
provide sufficient funds for fracking research in the proposed 2014
Department of Energy budget.
During a budget hearing before the Senate Committee on Energy and
Natural Resources, Sens. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Lisa Murkowski
(R-Alaska) also agreed that the $28.4 billion spending package doesn’t
invest sufficient funds in support of alternative energy sources like
hydropower.
Wyden, the committee chairman, said many of the cuts contained in the president’s budget were “clearly misguided.”
“I remain concerned about some of the investment decisions that I’ve
seen in the Department of Energy budget because I don’t think they truly
reflect the level playing field that’s needed to promote choice and
competition in energy and particularly encourage energy investment,”
Wyden said.
Murkowski, the ranking Republican who supported Wyden in all of his
objections, said she was disappointed in the administration’s document
and insisted that too many potentially rewarding energy sources are
ignored.
The administration, Murkowski said, is constantly emphasizing its
“all of the above” approach to energy sources “but I don’t see that
necessarily reflected in the budget here.”
“Instead it would appear there are still the favorites, even amongst
the renewables and the vehicle technologies,” Murkowski said. “One
example is the water power account is cut despite the fact that
hydropower is by far our largest source of clean, renewable energy.”
Daniel B. Poneman, the deputy secretary and chief operating officer
for the Department of Energy, defended the initiative, asserting that
the budget’s research initiatives “will help power America’s great
innovation machine to accelerate energy breakthroughs and create jobs.”
“The administration recognizes the government’s role in fostering
scientific and technological breakthroughs and has committed significant
resources to ensure America leads the world in the innovations of the
future,” Poneman said.
As an example, he cited the proposed $5.2 billion funding for the
Office of Science to support basic research “that could lead to new
discoveries and help solve our energy challenges.”
“These funds support progress in materials science, basic energy
science, advanced computing and more,” he said. “They also provide
America’s researchers and industries with state-of-the-art tools to
ensure they stay at the cutting edge of science.”
But Wyden expressed particular concern about research into hydraulic
fracturing, popularly known as fracking, a method implemented to reach
natural gas deposits by drilling into the earth’s surface using
pressurized liquid and breaking into shale. Fracking has resulted in
record-high levels of natural gas production.
The proposed budget devotes $12 million toward research on natural gas technology – a 15 percent cut.
“While this has certainly been a big plus for our economy and
benefits our country in a whole host of ways, valid concerns have been
raised as to how safely this continued development can be done,” Wyden
said. “These environmental issues in my mind have got to be addressed
and they’ve got to be addressed right.”
The investment in research in natural gas extraction “would be
returned many times over in savings that would be accrued in
environmental cleanup and revenue from further development,” Wyden said.
“So there’s a lot on the line. And it’s hard to say look at the size of
the stakes and then see this really very modest, disproportionately
small effort put into research.”
The combination of increased natural gas use, energy efficiency and
renewable energy has reduced the nation’s carbon emissions to their
lowest levels since 1994, Wyden said, emphasizing the need to make sure
hydraulic fracturing is environmentally sound.
“Abundant, low cost natural gas also provides our country with a
competitive advantage over competitors in Europe and Asia whose costs
are four or five times the costs of our manufacturers,” he said.
Poneman acknowledged that natural gas has proved to be “a game
changer for this country,” jumping from 2 percent of the nation’s energy
source to 35 percent in a short period of time.
“We are investing in the R&D where it’s helpful,” Poneman said.
“There is leverage in the fact that we are not doing this alone,”
maintaining that the agency is teaming up with the Environmental
Protection Agency and the Department of the Interior to deal with
fracking.
“We are making hard decisions on where the dollars go but I want to
assure you that the dollars we have dedicated to this technology we
believe are the right dollars,” he said.
Murkowski was equally perplexed by the department’s approach to
hydropower, saying it was among the “forgotten renewables” that never
received sufficient funding from DOE. The potential, she said, “is so
untapped” yet “it doesn’t seem like a priority.”
Poneman said the proposed budget actually increases funding for hydropower development.
“It still looks pretty meager when you compare it to wind and solar,” Murkowski said.
Also on Thursday, the committee in a 21-1 vote approved and sent to
the Senate floor the nomination of Dr. Ernest Moniz, a Massachusetts
Institute of Technology physicist, to serve as the nation’s 12th secretary of Energy, succeeding Steve Chu, who resigned.
In an unusually quick session, Wyden said Moniz, the subject of a
confirmation hearing last week, is “more than up to the challenge” of
wrestling with the nation’s energy needs, noting that he will use “the
best science and the most current data in considering the issues.”
Moniz, Wyden said, might actually be the first energy secretary,
should he be confirmed, “who instead of having to confront energy
shortages and scarcity would instead oversee an era of abundant carbon
reducing natural gas and dramatic growth of renewable energy
technologies.”
Murkowski urged other Republicans on the panel to support Moniz.
“I think he will focus on an energy policy that is affordable,
abundant, clean, diverse and secure,” she said. “He recognizes that
energy is good. He’s thoughtful, he’s considered.”
The lone holdout was Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), who expressed concern
that the administration’s plan to cut funding for a project to transform
plutonium into nuclear reactor fuel will adversely affect his state.
“As his resume indicates, Dr. Moniz is a well-educated and
experienced nominee. However, his lack of clarity on the future of the
MOX program – a project critical to South Carolina and to the safe
disposal of 34 tons of weapons grade plutonium, in keeping with our
international treaties – led me to a ‘no’ vote today,” Scott said.
“Clarity is something all too rare in Washington, and, as of today, Dr.
Moniz’s position on the future of the MOX program is murky at
best. Given what is at stake, that is unacceptable.”
http://pjmedia.com/blog/wheres-the-fracking-support-in-obamas-budget/?singlepage=true
Obama is no kings don’t like to be constrained. But all government should be.Obama is Pathological Liar, He is an Ideological Liar because the true objectives of his fundamental transformation of the United States are incompatible with American democracy and tradition Obama devotion to the Machiavellian dictum of "the ends justify the means" and lying as an instrument of government policy have been the tools of political extremists throughout history.
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