More incentives for energy efficiency and clean energy, says Obama
More incentives for energy efficiency and clean energy are what the US needs, President Barack Obama said last night in his State of the Union address.
Amid concerns that he might drop any mention of climate change and focus on healthcare reform in his speech, Obama instead urged the Senate to move forward on climate change legislation – although he did acknowledge the split in opinion over the cap-and-trade bill.
“To create more clean energy jobs, we need more production, more efficiency, more incentives,” he said.
“It means passing a comprehensive energy and climate bill with incentives that will finally make clean energy the profitable kind of energy in America,” he added.
The President offered his support for bipartisan efforts to advance the bill through the Senate and indicated that a compromise on some issues will be on the cards.
He said that the US would need to build a new generation of nuclear power stations and open up new offshore areas for oil and gas drilling. Obama also pledged continued support of biofuels and clean coal technology.
Eileen Claussen, president of the Pew Center on Global Climate Change, welcomed Obama’s comments but urged action on reducing emissions to start now.
“It is now up to the Congress along with the President to work together on this critically important issue,” she says.
Moving ahead with energy efficiency and clean energy is an opportunity to create new jobs and improve the security of the nation’s energy supply, Claussen adds.
President of the Alliance to Save Energy, Kateri Callahan, agrees, saying:
“With an historic high in construction unemployment and millions of leaky and energy-inefficient existing buildings, now is the time for America to get our own house in order through energy efficiency retrofits that will create many new jobs.”
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