House OKs new taxes on oil companies
By H. JOSEF HEBERT, Associated Press
Declaring a new direction in energy
policy, the House on Saturday approved
$16 billion in taxes on oil companies,
while providing billions of dollars in
tax breaks and incentives for renewable
energy and conservation efforts.
Republican opponents said the
legislation ignored the need to produce
more domestic oil, natural gas and coal.
One GOP lawmaker bemoaned "the pure
venom ... against the oil and gas industry."
The House passed the tax provisions by a
vote of 221-189. Earlier it had
approved, 241-172, a companion energy
package aimed at boosting energy
efficiency and expanding use of
biofuels, wind power and other renewable
energy sources.
"We are turning to the future," said
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
The two bills, passed at an unusual
Saturday session as lawmakers prepared
to leave town for their monthlong summer
recess, will be merged with legislation
passed by the Senate in June.
On one of the most contentious and
heavily lobbied issues, the House voted
to require investor-owned electric
utilities nationwide to generate at
least 15 percent of their electricity
from renewable energy sources such as
wind or biofuels.
The utilities and business interests had
argued aggressively against the federal
renewables mandate, saying it would
raise electricity prices in regions of
the country that do not have abundant
wind energy. But environmentalists said
the requirement will spur investments in
renewable fuels and help address global
warming as utilities use less coal.
"This will save consumers money," said
Rep. Tom Udall, D-N.M., the provision's
co-sponsor, maintaining utilities will
have to use less high-priced natural
gas. He noted that nearly half the
states already have a renewable energy
mandate for utilities, and if utilities
can't find enough renewable they can
meet part of the requirement through
power conservation measures.
The bill also calls for more stringent
energy efficiency standards for
appliances and lighting and incentives
for building more energy-efficient
"green" buildings. It would authorize
special bonds for cities and counties to
reduce energy demand.
Pelosi, D-Calif., said it was essential
to commit to renewable energy while
reducing reliance on fossil fuels. Doing
so, she said, will help address global
warming and make the country more
energy-independent.
"It's about our children, about our
future, the world in which they live,"
Pelosi said.
Democrats avoided a nasty fight by
ignoring — at least for the time being —
calls for automakers to make vehicles
more fuel-efficient. Cars, sport utility
vehicles and small trucks use most of
the country's oil and produce almost
one-third of the carbon dioxide
emissions linked to global warming.
That issue, as well as whether to
require huge increases in the use of
corn-based ethanol as a substitute for
gasoline, were left to be thrashed out
when the House bill is merged with
energy legislation the Senate passed in
June.
Majority Leader Steny Hoyer of Maryland
said he was confident the final bill
that will go to President Bush will
contain a significant increase in
automobile fuel economy requirements.
"This is a historic turn away from a
fossil fuel agenda toward renewable
energy. It's been a long time in
coming," said Rep. Ed Markey, D-Mass.,
in an interview. Markey abandoned
efforts to get an auto mileage provision
into the bill, but also expressed
confidence one will be added during
negotiations with the Senate. The Senate
in passing energy legislation in June
called for a 40 percent increase auto
mileage to 35 mpg by 2020.
Republicans said the House bill did
nothing to increase domestic oil and
natural gas production or take further
advantage of coal, the country's most
abundant domestic energy resource.
"There's a war going on against energy
from fossil fuels," said Rep. Ralph
Hall, R-Texas. "I can't understand the
pure venom felt against the oil and gas
industry."
Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, said the bill
was "a political exercise" to promote
"pet projects, ... pet ideas." He
predicted it "isn't going anywhere"
because President Bush will veto it if
it gets to his desk.
The White House indicated President Bush
might veto the bill if he gets it saying
it makes "no serious attempts to
increase our energy security or address
high energy costs" and would harm
domestic oil and gas production.
The bill would repeal for oil companies
a tax breaks given in 2004 to help
domestic manufacturers compete against
foreign companies, and another tax break
pertaining to income from foreign oil
production. Critics of the two tax
provisions called them loopholes that
the industry had taken advantage of.
The House-passed bill also includes an
array of loan guarantees, federal grants
and tax breaks for alternative energy
programs. They include building biomass
factories, research into making ethanol
from wood chips and prairie grasses and
producing better batteries for hybrid
gas-electric automobiles.
The legislation would end a tax break
for buying large SUVs, known as the
"Hummer tax loophole" because it allows
people who buy some of the most
expensive SUVs to write off much of the
cost.