[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 39 (Tuesday, March 15, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H1800-H1801]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE COST OF THE ENERGY TAX PREVENTION ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr. Quigley) for 5 minutes.
Mr. QUIGLEY. Mr. Speaker, Colstrip, Montana, is home to the second
largest coal plant west of the Mississippi. One boxcar-full of coal is
burned every 5 minutes.
The burning coal creates sodium, thallium, mercury, boron, aluminum,
and arsenic, which is pumped out of the factory and into the air. The
chemicals that are pumped into the air are caught in the factory's
scrubbers and then dumped with coal ash into giant settling ponds.
These ponds are shallow artificial lakes of concentrated toxicity which
leach this poison into wells and aquifers.
The sludge flows into the surrounding towns and countryside, bubbling
up against foundations and floorings, cracking the floor in Colstrip's
local grocery store. Ranchers in eastern Montana are now suing the
plant for damages; noxious water, they cite, is the only liquid that
fill their wells and stock ponds.
James Jansen, a renowned climate scientist, says Colstrip itself will
cause the extinction of 400 species. But Colstrip burns on. Why?
Because we have no national energy plan, and because there are
currently no Federal enforceable regulations specific to coal ash.
This lack of federally enforceable safeguards is exactly what led to
the disaster in Tennessee, where a dam holding more than 1 billion
gallons of toxic coal ash failed. The TVA disaster destroyed 300 acres,
dozens of homes, killed fish and other wildlife, and poisoned the Emory
and Clinch Rivers.
From Tennessee to Montana and across the Nation, the story is the
same: We have no national conservation plan, no national energy policy,
no regulatory enforcement authority.
What is worse, today we are faced with a bill, H.R. 910, the Energy
Tax Prevention Act, which purports to protect citizens from taxation.
In reality, this bill is a death sentence not only to our land, air,
water, animals, and plants but to humans.
This bill overturns proven scientific findings that carbon pollution
endangers the health of Americans. It repeals the greenhouse gas
reporting rule and removes the Environmental Protection
[[Page H1801]]
Agency's authority to require energy efficiency at power plants and
refineries. This bill simply says that science doesn't matter.
I stand here today to refute that claim and, further, to protect the
integrity of science. It is this science, these facts and figures, that
have led hundreds of scientists to confirm that global warming is real.
In fact, over 200 peer-reviewed scientific studies have found that
global warming is real and that man contributes to it. To this date,
zero peer-reviewed studies have found otherwise.
It is this science that led the Supreme Court to rule that the
Environmental Protection Agency does in fact have the authority to
regulate greenhouse gases, and it is this science that led the Congress
to pass the Clean Air Act, the act which designated the EPA as the body
charged with overseeing, adapting, and implementing these regulations.
In the coming months, EPA will begin regulating greenhouse gases from
certain emitters for the first time. These regulations have become
hugely controversial and, sadly, political. These rules seek to combat
man-made climate change; man-made climate change that is melting our
polar ice caps, that is raising the level of our oceans, and that is
modifying our seasonal temperatures; man-made climate change that is
altering the duration of our growing season, that is flooding part of
the world and is causing multiyear droughts and others; man-made
climate change that is allowing particulate matters to infiltrate our
children's lungs, making them suffer from lifelong asthma and making us
die earlier.
And still, here we are, ignoring cries from health and medical
professionals who have asked us, as Members of this body, to fulfill
the promise of clean, healthy air for all Americans to breathe.
Support full implementation of the Clean Air Act and resist any
efforts to weaken, delay, or block progress toward a healthier future
for all Americans.
Ignoring requests from former senior military officials who wrote
just last week, ``America's dependence on oil constitutes a clear and
present danger to the security and welfare of the United States,'' and
that, ``As former senior military officials, we are concerned about
congressional efforts to undermine the Environmental Protection
Agency's regulatory authority that is critical to reducing our
dependence on oil,'' Mr. Speaker, we cannot afford the costs of the
Energy Tax Prevention Act: Lost and devastated ecosystems, lost jobs,
and lost lives.
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