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EPA Proposal is Power Grab by Administration to Pass Energy Tax (Rep. Steve Scalise)

The EPA’s proposal to regulate carbon dioxide and other gases is a power grab orchestrated by radical environmentalists to help the President pass his reckless “cap and trade” energy tax that will raise energy and utility costs on every American family, and ship millions of American jobs overseas.

The President has acknowledged that his plan will lead to higher electricity prices by stating, “under my plan of a cap-and-trade system, electricity rates would necessarily skyrocket.”

According to Peter Orszag, the President’s own budget director, the average annual household cost increase would be about $1300 for a 15% cut in CO2 emissions which is 80 percent less than the cut sought in Obama’s proposed budget. Orszag testified before Congress last year saying that price increases borne by consumers are essential to the success of their “cap and trade” program.

I have co-sponsored legislation (H.R.391) that would clarify that EPA does not have the authority under the Clean Air Act to regulate Greenhouse gases, which they have never before had the authority to regulate. EPA regulation of CO2 would constitute EPA’s largest assertion of authority over the American economy.

As a member of the Energy and Environment Subcommittee of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which has jurisdiction over national energy policy and The Clean Air Act, I will continue fighting to oppose bad policies that threaten our economy. Rather than a “cap and trade” scheme that will raise taxes on American families and ship millions of jobs overseas, we need to pass a comprehensive national energy policy that will further develop the technologies for renewable sources of energy like wind and solar, encourage more conservation, but will also expand our own natural resources including oil, natural gas, clean coal, and nuclear power.

Tags Business Climate change Climate change policy Emissions trading Energy development Energy policy Energy tax Environment Government Person Career Regulation of greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act Technology United States Environmental Protection Agency

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