Saturday, March 16, 2013

Obama seeks $2 billion in research on cleaner fuels

WASHINGTON: With few options available for financing his clean-energy ambitions, President Barack Obama on Friday will propose diverting $2 billion in revenue from federal oil and gas leases over the next decade to pay for research on advanced vehicles, White House officials said.


Obama will visit the Argonne National Laboratory near Chicago to tour its state-of-the-art research facilities and to promote his idea, first proposed in last month's State of the Union address, to use oil and gas money to find ways to replace hydrocarbons as the primary fuel for the nation's cars, trucks and buses.

The idea enjoys some bipartisan and business support, but is likely to encounter strong resistance from Congressional Republicans, who will portray it as a tax on energy producers.

The White House says the money will come from growth in drilling revenue from leases on public lands and waters over the next decade and is not a new tax.

Officials said Obama will present the proposal as part of his "all-of-the-above energy strategy," which includes an increase in oil and gas development; support for nonpolluting sources like wind, solar and geothermal energy; loan guarantees for new nuclear plants; and research into long-term alternatives to fossil fuels.

Obama has given up on moving comprehensive climate change legislation through Congress and has ruled out a carbon tax as a way to finance the development of alternative energy sources, so he is pursuing smaller-scale projects that do not require new sources of revenue.

The Energy Security Trust, as he calls his proposal to shift oil and gas royalties to alternative energy research, is one of those projects.

A White House official, who discussed the president's proposal on the condition of anonymity in advance of Friday's speech, said that the energy trust was a central part of the administration's economic strategy.

"In the State of the Union, he asked what can we do to make America a magnet for the jobs of future," the official said in a telephone briefing on Thursday afternoon.

"One key answer is to ensure that the United States is and remains at the cutting edge of breakthrough technologies that will get our economy off oil." Obama came to office with grand ambitions of remaking the nation's energy economy and tackling climate change.

His stimulus package included $90 billion for clean-energy research, but most of that money is gone and Congress is unlikely to finance such work at anything like those levels in the future.

The Argonne National Laboratory, which has done groundbreaking research in vehicle battery technology that has helped jump-start the electric car industry in America, received a large chunk of the stimulus money.

Now, it is facing reductions under the mandatory budget cuts known as the sequester.

The laboratory's director, Eric D Isaacs, who will greet the president on Friday, warned this week that the spending cuts would have a devastating impact as "the nation begins to feel the loss of important new scientific ideas that now will not be explored, and of brilliant young scientists who now will take their talents overseas or perhaps even abandon research entirely."

In an article in Atlantic written with the directors of two other department of energy labs, Dr Isaacs said that the sequester cuts would force all new programs and research initiatives to be cancelled, probably for at least two years.

White House officials said the president hoped to use some of the added revenue from the nation's oil and gas boom to replace basic research money lost by the mandatory budget cuts and the expiration of the stimulus funds.

indiatimes.com

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