ACEEE PRESS BRIEF
ACEEE'S HOWARD GELLER SUBMITS TOP-PRIORITY ENERGY POLICY
RECOMMENDATIONS IN TESTIMONY TO CONGRESSIONAL ENERGY SUBCOMMITTEE
Terms Bush Announcement to Reduce Energy Use in Federal Facilities
a Trivial Step
For further information, contact: Howard
Geller at 202-429-8873
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 4, 2001
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- On the same day that President Bush announced
plans to reduce peak consumption at federal facilities in California by 10
percent, Howard Geller, former Executive Director of the American Council
for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE), called upon the Bush Administration
and Congress to act on ACEEE's five-point strategy to make improving energy
efficiency a cornerstone of national energy strategy. Geller appeared before
the U.S. House of Representatives' Committee on Science, Energy Subcommittee
at a hearing titled "Energy Realities: Rates of Consumption, Energy Reserves,
and Future Options."
"Ten years ago the previous Bush Administration issued its National Energy
Policy," said Geller. "It gave considerable priority to greater energy efficiency
and called for expansion of energy efficiency R&D and technology deployment
programs, new policies to stimulate utility energy efficiency programs,
establishing new appliance and equipment energy efficiency standards, and
new federal incentives to increase energy efficiency. The current Bush
Administration should make improving energy efficiency a cornerstone of its
energy strategy."
Serious electricity challenges in the West and rising prices for gasoline
and natural gas in other regions of the United States were discussed at the
hearing, setting the tone for Geller's delivery to the Subcommittee of ACEEE's
five points:
-
Reject deep cuts in funding proposed for DOE's energy efficiency programs
and instead expand these programs in FY2002;
-
Increase corporate average fuel economy (CAFE) standards for cars and light
trucks or adopt an equivalent fuel consumption cap;
-
Adopt a national system benefit trust fund;
-
Enact tax incentives for highly energy-efficient vehicles, homes, commercial
buildings, and other products; and
-
Enact or strengthen efficiency standards on various new products.
Geller cited ACEEE research, saying, "increasing CAFE standards...would save
about 1.5 million barrels of petroleum per day by 2010 and 4.8 million barrels
by 2020. Over 40 years, increasing vehicle efficiency...would save 10-20
times more oil than the projected supply from the Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge (ANWR)." He also noted that federal investments in energy efficiency
programs could produce a 40 to 1 return on taxpayer investments, that a national
system benefit trust fund could reduce U.S. electricity use by 9 percent
by 2010, and that steps to improve federal efficiency standards could save
consumers billions of dollars annually.
Following the hearing, in response to questions about President Bush's
announcement that he is ordering federal facilities to take steps to reduce
their energy use, Geller termed Bush's action "a modestly useful but trivial
step," noting that federal facilities are just 1.5% of U.S. energy use. "In
general, we should be saving energy by promoting the development and use
of more efficient appliances, buildings, vehicles, and factories, not forcing
consumers or workers to turn off necessary lights, air conditioners, or
escalators," added Geller. He suggested that "President Bush should build
on this modest step by including ACEEE's five strategies in its forthcoming
energy plan." Geller in particular criticized the President for submitting
a budget that cuts funding by 50% for the Federal Energy Management Program,
which helps federal facilities reduce their energy use, noting that "these
cuts will make it difficult for federal facilities to achieve the President's
objectives."
The hearing can be viewed at:
http://www.house.gov/science/energy/energyhearings.htm.
Copies of Howard Geller's testimony are available at ACEEE publications office,
phone: 202- 429-0063; email: ace3@ix.netcom.com. The report is also available
on the World Wide Web at
/tstimony/nrgchlng.htm.