[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 66 (Monday, May 5, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2648-S2649]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
STATEMENTS ON INTRODUCED BILLS AND JOINT RESOLUTIONS
By Mr. ROCKEFELLER (for himself and Mr. Walsh):
S. 2287. A bill to facilitate the development and commercial
deployment of carbon capture and sequestration technologies, and for
other purposes; to the Committee on Finance.
[[Page S2649]]
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. Mr. President, today I am introducing two bills, S.
2287 and S. 2288, to help advance commercial deployment of clean coal
technologies. The Carbon Capture and Sequestration Deployment Act of
2014 and the Expanding Carbon Capture through Enhanced Oil Recovery Act
of 2014. These pieces of legislation would invest in carbon capture and
sequestration, CCS, research and development; expand tax credits for
companies investing in CCS technologies; and create loan guarantees for
construction of new CCS facilities and retrofits of existing
facilities.
As I have said many times before, the reality remains for West
Virginia and our Nation--we need coal and we simply cannot meet our
energy demands without coal.
That being said, it is unrealistic to think that coal is as clean as
it could be, or that it will be around forever. Yet to think that we
can stop burning coal and shift to cleaner sources of energy
immediately is simply not viable. We must place our focus on a feasible
alternative, and carbon capture and sequestration technologies can
provide just that.
The legislation I am introducing today combines several of my
proposals in past years with new ideas for improving CCS deployment,
including an expansion of tax credits for companies utilizing and
improving upon CCS technology.
The Carbon Capture and Sequestration Deployment Act of 2014 would
authorize $1 billion over 15 years for an industry-government research
program through the Department of Energy and authorize $20 billion in
loan guarantees to be used for the construction or retrofitting of
facilities utilizing CCS technology, and for the construction of
CO2 transmission pipelines. Moreover, it modifies the
existing Carbon Dioxide Sequestration Tax Credit, 45Q, currently capped
and available on a first come-first served basis, by allowing projects
to apply for an allocation of credits to use in the future, and
ensuring that multiple projects will have the opportunity to take
advantage of these important credits. Finally, it creates a new
investment tax credit. Carbon capture and sequestration facilities that
operate with at least a 65 percent capture rate would receive an
investment tax credit of 15 percent of their costs. Those operating
with a higher capture rate, up to 100 percent of CO2
emissions, would receive a maximum credit of 30 percent of their costs.
The second piece of legislation, the Expanding Carbon Capture through
Enhanced Oil Recovery Act of 2014, expands the Carbon Dioxide
Sequestration Tax Credit, 45Q, tax credit to help advance capture
technology through the greater use of carbon dioxide enhanced oil
recovery, CO2- EOR, in the United States.
A decades-old and proven practice, CO2-EOR involves
injecting CO2 into already-developed oil fields to coax
additional production. According to the National Energy Technology
Laboratory, increasing the supply of CO2 captured from man-
made sources has the potential to increase American oil production by
tens of billions of barrels, while safely storing billions of tons of
CO2 underground.
The existing 45Q tax credit remains insufficient to take advantage of
CO2-EOR's potential. New, additional 45Q credits would be
awarded via competitive bidding in a way that will make certain that
the government is incentivizing carbon capture to be used in EOR
without overpaying, and that credits are available and sufficient for
the range of potential man-made sources of CO2.
According to the National Enhanced Oil Recovery Initiative's
analysis, new 45Q credits allocated over ten years would generate more
than 8 billion barrels of oil, while storing 4 billion tons of
CO2 over 40 years.
I remain committed to meeting the challenges facing the coal industry
while also protecting our environment for current and future
generations. I hope that others with a stake in meeting coal's
challenges will join me in this effort as well.
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By Mr. LEVIN (for himself and Mr. Inhofe) (by request):
S. 2289. A bill to authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2015 for
military activities of the Department of Defense and for military
construction, to prescribe military personnel strengths for such fiscal
year, and for other purposes; to the Committee on Armed Services.
Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, Senator Inhofe and I are introducing, by
request, the administration's proposed National Defense Authorization
Act for fiscal year 2015. As is the case with any bill that is
introduced by request, we introduce this bill for the purpose of
placing the administration's proposals before Congress and the public
without expressing our own views on the substance of these proposals.
As Chairman and Ranking Member of the Armed Services Committee, we look
forward to giving the administration's requested legislation our most
careful review and thoughtful consideration.
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