Fuels

Senate Passes Energy Bill

Legislation includes price oil, gas gouging provision along with CAFE, ethanol boosts

WASHINGTON -- The U.S. Senate passed an energy bill late last Thursday that includes an increase in automobile fuel economy and a requirement for large increases in the production of ethanol, said the Associated Press.

The legislation also calls for price gouging provisions that make it unlawful to charge an "unconscionably excessive" price for oil products including gasoline and give the federal government new authority to investigate oil industry market manipulation.

In an eleventh-hour compromise fashioned after two days of [image-nocss] closed-door meetings, an agreement was reached to increase fuel economythe Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standardby 40% to 35 miles per gallon for cars, SUVs and pickup trucks by 2020.

But the fuel economy issue threatened to topple the legislation up to the last minute. Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nevada) held off the vote until late into the evening so several senators could be called back to Capitol Hill to provide the 60-vote margin needed to overcome a threatened filibuster from pro-auto industry senators.

Shortly before midnight, senators voted 62-32 to cut off debate, and followed by passing the bill 65-27. The measure now awaits action by the House, which is expected to take it up this week. But attempts to combine the two bills and send legislation to President Bush probably will not be possible until later this year.

It would be the first increase in vehicle fuel efficiency since the current 22.7 miles per gallon for cars was put in place in 1989 and the first time Congress has imposed a new auto efficiency mandate in 32 years.

Supporters said the new requirement would save 2.5 million barrels of oil a day by 2025, when large numbers of the more fuel-stingy cars will be on the road.

Republicans complained that the energy bill is tilted too much toward renewables and fuel efficiency and does nothing to boost domestic oil or natural gas production. But its supporters said it reflects a shift to new energy priorities, away from promoting fossil fuels to supporting other energy sources such wind and biomass to make electricity and ethanol to power cars and trucks.

"This bill starts America on a path toward reducing our reliance on oil," said Reid.

But Democrats did not get all that they wanted. Republicans blocked Democratic efforts to pass a $32 billion package of tax incentives for renewable energy and clean fuels, objecting to increasing taxes on oil companies by $29 billion over 10 years to pay for it.

Democrats also were unable to include in the bill a requirement for electric utilities to produce at least 15% of their electricity from renewable fuels such as wind and biomass. Senators from the South objected, saying the region could not meet such a standard, and Republicans refused to let the measure come up for a vote.

But the legislation provides a bonanza to farmers and the ethanol industry. It requires ethanol production to grow to at least 36 billion gallon a year by 2022, a sevenfold increase of the amount of ethanol processed last year.

The Petroleum Marketers Association of America (PMAA) said it is strongly opposed to the gouging legislation. And President Bush has threatened to veto any bill with a price gouging provision, the group said.

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