Kerry proposals $30 billion dollar energy independence plan.

A good start but a more aggressive energy policy tied in with national security must be created to secure U.S. advantages.


WASHINGTON, DC, August 9, 2004 (ENS) - Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry outlined a 10 year, $30 billion energy plan on Friday and said the proposal will “put America on the path to energy independence and create hundreds of thousands of new jobs at the same time.”

Kerry’s plan centers on increased support for renewable energy and for alternative motor fuels made from corn and soybeans, as well as incentives for clean coal technology and for more fuel efficient cars and trucks.

“We can control our own destiny, we can create the jobs of tomorrow and we can make sure that no young American in uniform will ever be held hostage to our dependence on oil from the Middle East,” Kerry told supporters in Kansas City, Missouri.

Kerry’s remarks came at the end of a week that saw oil prices soar to a near record high of almost $45 a barrel.

The Democratic presidential nominee blamed the Bush administration for making the nation more dependent on foreign oil and for not taking action to aid consumers and business feeling the pinch from rising oil prices.

The nation’s reliance on foreign oil has risen from 58.2 percent in 2000 to 61.7 percent today, according to the Kerry campaign, with roughly a quarter of America’s oil supply coming from the Middle East.

It does not have to be this way," Kerry said. “America will be safer and freer when the resources that fuel our economy are in our hands and when we develop new energy sources in our country.”
The proposal calls for the creation of a $20 billion Energy Security and Conservation Trust fund, capitalized with existing federal offshore oil and gas revenues, in order to provide a guaranteed funding stream for energy.

The trust fund would be used to meet dual goals, to be met by 2020, of ensuring 20 percent of the nation’s motor fuel and electricity come from renewable energy sources.

The proposal earmarks $5 billion for a clean fuels partnership to research fuels from agricultural waste and includes support for increased production of ethanol, a fuel made from corn,

It provides $10 billion to help U.S. automakers develop and manufacture more fuel efficient vehicles, as well as $5 billion in consumer tax credits, including $5,000 tax credits to buy cars and trucks that guzzle less gas.

“We will put in place the tax incentives and joint venture efforts that help us build an independent fuel base for America,” Kerry said.

http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/aug2004/2004-08-09-10.asp

Interesting.

Of course he has had absolutely no history of any meaningful leadership on legislation in the Senate.

Hasn't he had 20 years or so to bring up this legislation?

^ You mean as opposed to the storied history of meaningful leadership that our current president had before he was 'elected'?

^I didn't vote for GWB! Just noting that an election year is a funny time to discover energy policy.

AND, Kerry has almost no record of legislative leadership in the Senate. Bush at least owned the Texas Rangers....... And he was Governor too I think....

Well he has a plan now doesn't he.

Any business Bush has run has failed and now he’s failed in regards to the U.S.’s economy.

Nice tax cuts while in a war Bush, F'ing brilliant. Where’s that 2.6 million jobs he promised would be created this year? 33,000 new jobs created in June, just short a 100,000 or 2. And the few jobs that are created are McJobs.