Hill Heat: Sen. Reid Calls for Global Coal Plant Moratorium Science Policy Legislation Action tag:www.hillheat.com,2005:Typo Typo 2007-08-20T15:13:48-05:00 The Cunctator urn:uuid:d4915ae2-6fb4-449e-907e-7563a7b0fdf8 2007-08-20T15:03:00-05:00 2007-08-20T15:13:48-05:00 Sen. Reid Calls for Global Coal Plant Moratorium <p>Sen. Reid, Senate Majority Leader from Nevada, detailed his position on America&#8217;s energy and global warming policy. He called for a moratorium on coal-fired plants and a restructuring of tax policy away from gas and oil and toward renewable energy.</p> <p>At a community meeting <a href="http://www.pahrumpvalleytimes.com/2007/Aug-17-Fri-2007/news/16110314.html">he said</a>: <blockquote>Let us spend a few billion developing what we have a lot of. We have a lot of sun, we have a lot of wind and we are the Saudi Arabia of geothermal energy. The sooner we move toward the sun, the wind, geothermal, biomass, the better off we&#8217;ll be, and we will never do it until we have a tax policy that gives people an incentive to invest in these industries because the big oil companies have controlled America.</blockquote></p> <p>More at <a href="http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2007/8/19/155322/893">Grist</a>, <a href="http://itsgettinghotinhere.org/2007/08/19/harry-reid-says-no-new-coal/trackback/">It&#8217;s Getting Hot in Here</a>, and <a href="http://ithinkmining.blog.infomine.com/2007/08/20/reid-of-nevada-takes-on-coal-fired-power-plants-is-he-a-politician-or-a-leader/trackback/">I Think Mining</a>.</p> <p>Sen. Reid, Senate Majority Leader from Nevada, detailed his position on America&#8217;s energy and global warming policy. He called for a moratorium on coal-fired plants and a restructuring of tax policy away from gas and oil and toward renewable energy.</p> <p>At a community meeting <a href="http://www.pahrumpvalleytimes.com/2007/Aug-17-Fri-2007/news/16110314.html">he said</a>: <blockquote>Let us spend a few billion developing what we have a lot of. We have a lot of sun, we have a lot of wind and we are the Saudi Arabia of geothermal energy. The sooner we move toward the sun, the wind, geothermal, biomass, the better off we&#8217;ll be, and we will never do it until we have a tax policy that gives people an incentive to invest in these industries because the big oil companies have controlled America.</blockquote></p> <p>More at <a href="http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2007/8/19/155322/893">Grist</a>, <a href="http://itsgettinghotinhere.org/2007/08/19/harry-reid-says-no-new-coal/trackback/">It&#8217;s Getting Hot in Here</a>, and <a href="http://ithinkmining.blog.infomine.com/2007/08/20/reid-of-nevada-takes-on-coal-fired-power-plants-is-he-a-politician-or-a-leader/trackback/">I Think Mining</a>.</p> From the <a href="http://www.lasvegassun.com/sunbin/stories/nevada/2007/aug/18/081810591.html">Associated Press</a> this weekend: <blockquote>Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said the threat of global warming should preclude the construction of new coal-fired power plants anywhere in the world. <p>The Nevada Democrat last month came out against three proposed major coal-fired plants in his home state, but on Saturday extended that opposition to any such new plants worldwide.</p> <p>He said each coal-fired plant burns 7 million tons of coal every year, spewing out pollutants that contribute to global warming.</p> <p>&#8220;There&#8217;s not a coal-fired plant in America that&#8217;s clean. They&#8217;re all dirty,&#8221; Reid told reporters after speaking at a conference on renewable energy. &#8220;Unless we do something quickly about global warming, we&#8217;re in trouble.&#8221; </blockquote></p>