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Potential Energy


Kevin Bullis is Technology Review’s energy editor.

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  • Cheap... : I think this is so true, Electric vehicles are a great idea, but like most new advances in tech,...
  • RD : No. Cap & Trade taxes Americans for energy use and redistributes it to political supporters like...
  • RD : Those you call AGW, ARE in favor of nuclear energy. It's the Progressives who have been blocking...
  • RD : CO2 isn't the problem.  In Maryland, a new study in the International Journal of Climatology – by...
  • kstauff : The only agreement I recall us not upholding recently is the ABM treaty, for which we informed...
  • kstauff : Kevin:  You're either unaware or glossing over recent history.  The House climate bill BARELY...
  • cheadrick : Where did that 1% number come from? There have been no accurate measurements of atmospheric CO2...
  • colinnwn : "We fly planes so much that on 9/11 global temperatures dropped a large amount more than usual as...
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  • devassocx : I for one, welcome failure of such an ill-conceived and costly(for no reason) piece of...
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Monday, June 29, 2009

House Passes the Climate Bill

But the bill, which includes caps on carbon dioxide emissions, is still far from becoming law.
By Kevin Bullis

The massive energy bill that would set a cap on carbon dioxide emissions and provide other incentives and requirements for clean energy has passed the U.S. House of Representatives by a slim margin.

It's far from becoming law, though. Passing the bill in the Senate will be more difficult: many Democrats voted against the bill in the House, something that can't happen in the Senate if it is to pass. What's more, President Obama isn't entirely happy with the bill and will be pushing to get some changes made, including removing a provision designed to encourage other countries to set up emissions goals of their own, according to the Washington Post.

Some experts hope that the bill's passage in the House will prove a strong bargaining chip later this year when world leaders meet to discuss international caps on emissions.

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Technology Review November/December 2009

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