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Kerry Promotes Plan for Energy Independence SANTA FE, New Mexico, October 12, 2004 (ENS) - America is now more dependent on foreign oil than when President George W. Bush came into office, which puts national security at risk, Democratic presidential candidate Senator John Kerry charged Monday. In a speech to a Santa Fe crowd outlining his energy independence proposal, Kerry took aim at Bush's energy policy which, he said, has helped the oil industry but has squeezed families and the environment. Families are paying 38 percent more at the pump than when the Bush administration took office, said Kerry, "hurting our economy," and the administration is "trying to exempt oil companies and gas companies from Clean Water Act requirements that limit pollution, threatening our environment." Kerry slammed the Bush administration for soaring gas prices that have hit record levels this month. "Higher gasoline prices have cost the American consumer over $34 billion since George Bush took office," he said. "This money has gone directly from consumers pocketbooks into the hands of oil companies and oil producers, including OPEC. Over that same time, the big three American oil companies – ExxonMobil, ChevronTexaco and ConocoPhillips - made profits of $38.6 billion off American consumers."
Democratic Presidential candidate Senator John Kerry makes his case for energy independence in Santa Fe. (Photo by Sharon Farmer courtesy Kerry campaign)“Instead of standing up for you," Kerry said, "George Bush has chosen secret meetings with the energy industry behind closed doors in the White House, where they can make their case, but there’s no one there to make yours." The Democratic challenger was referring to the meetings chaired by Vice President Dick Cheney early in 2001 that shaped the administration's National Energy Policy, which is weighted towards developing fossil fuels and nuclear power over renewable energy.Before becoming Bush's running mate, Cheney was chairman and chief executive officer of the Texas based Halliburton Co., one of the world's largest service providers to the oil and gas industry. The people who attended those meetings has been a closely guarded secret kept by the White House in the face of court challenges that have still not been resolved. "Among those reportedly advising the group," said Kerry, "were former Enron Chairman Kenneth Lay and two of the company's lobbyists; Haley Barbour, a former Republican Party chairman and lobbyist for energy producers, who is now the governor of Mississippi," and "Marc Racicot, a former governor of Montana and electric industry lobbyist, who is now chairman of Bush's re-election campaign. "Sixty-one Pioneers, each of whom pledged to raise $100,000 for Bush’s 2000 campaign, were from the energy and natural resources industry," he said. "Five of these Pioneers, including Edison Electric Institute President Thomas Kuhn, were appointed to Bush’s energy transition team." But even with those powerful figures behind him, the President's energy legislation has been stalled in Congress, a fact that Kerry pointed out to his Santa Fe audience. “And after four years of empty rhetoric and inaction, the Republican-controlled Congress is ending another session without passing a good energy bill for America," he said. "At the end of the day, George Bush just couldn’t get it done." “Just like on every other issue, they’ll tell you they have an energy plan,” Kerry said. “But as usual, it’s a plan that warms the hearts of their powerful friends and leaves you out in the cold.” But President Bush, in his record of accomplishment says that his administration "has completed, or is in the process of implementing, nearly 75 percent of the 106 recommendations" in the National Energy Policy, such as filling the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to 700 million barrels. Contrasting his energy plan with that of his opponent, Kerry said the Bush plan exempts oil and gas companies from Clean Water Act requirements that limit pollution from construction sites. Runoff from drill pads contains toxic chemicals that pollute rivers and streams and threaten drinking water supplies. The Bush plan also exempts new gas extraction technologies, called hydraulic fracturing, from the Safe Drinking Water Act, Kerry pointed out. Officials at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency have raised concerns that these technologies, which were invented by Halliburton, may contaminate water wells and poison aquifers. Kerry says his energy plan "will increase fuel efficiency, lower energy prices, produce alternative and renewable sources of energy, and create new energy jobs in America, not in the Middle East." Kerry's pledges that his energy plan would:
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