UPDATE: Exelon Latest To Leave US Chamber Over Climate Policy
September 28 2009 - 5:55PM
Dow Jones News
Power company Exelon Corp. (EXC) on Monday joined a stream of
companies quitting the U.S. Chamber of Commerce over the chamber's
stance against federal climate-change legislation.
The decision by Exelon, the nation's biggest nuclear power plant
operator, follows similar moves last week by utilities PG&E
Corp. (PCG) and PNM Resources Inc. (PNM), and highlights a growing
rift in the nation's power sector and in other industries over
climate policy. The U.S. government is under pressure, both from
other countries and from U.S. states, to commit to reductions in
greenhouse-gas emissions, particularly with the approach of a key
global climate-change treaty summit in Copenhagen in December.
Chicago-based Exelon said the U.S. government needs to set
climate-change policy promptly so companies can "put a price on
carbon" and figure out how much it will cost to cut their
emissions. The U.S. House of Representatives in June passed a
landmark bill that would require the U.S. to cut greenhouse-gas
emissions 17% from 2005 levels by 2020, and create a market-based
program called cap-and-trade in which companies could buy and sell
the right to emit carbon dioxide.
"The carbon-based free lunch is over," Exelon Chairman and Chief
Executive John W. Rowe said in a statement. "But while we can't fix
our climate problems for free, the price signal sent through a
cap-and-trade system will drive low-carbon investments in the most
inexpensive and efficient way possible."
The companies' departures are unlikely to change the Chamber's
position on climate-change policy, said David Chavern, the group's
chief operating officer. He added that although the Chamber opposed
the House bill and it disagrees with plans by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency to begin regulating greenhouse-gas
emissions, the group isn't opposed to U.S. climate-change
legislation.
"Congress should do everything it can to promote and incentivize
technology development and other policies that allow us to control
carbon in ways that don't trash the economy," Chavern said.
Exelon, PG&E and PNM all operate nuclear power plants and
emit far less carbon dioxide than some of their peers, particularly
companies that operate large fleets of coal-fired power plants.
Coal plants produce roughly twice the greenhouse-gas emissions of
similarly sized natural gas-fired plants. Nuclear power plants emit
almost no greenhouse-gas emissions.
Despite their differences, U.S. power companies, represented by
the lobbying group Edison Electric Institute, banded together in
support of the climate-change legislation that passed the
House.
The U.S. Chamber opposed that bill, sponsored by Reps. Henry
Waxman, D-Calif., and Edward Markey, D-Mass. It also recently
suggested that the U.S. hold a "Scopes-like" trial to debate
evidence that climate change is man-made, in response to a proposed
finding by the EPA that global warming poses a danger to public
health.
The EPA's proposed finding and potential greenhouse-gas rules
are in response to a 2007 Supreme Court ruling that directed the
agency to determine whether greenhouse gases are pollutants that
should be regulated under the Clean Air Act.
California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger last week criticized
federal lawmakers for delaying action on climate-change legislation
and urged them to ignore what he called "naysayers" who oppose such
legislation.
California's 2006 climate-change law requires energy and other
companies to cut their greenhouse-gas emissions starting in 2012.
Ten Northeastern states, including New York and New Jersey, require
power companies to cut their greenhouse-gas emissions under a
program called the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative.
U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., is expected to unveil a
climate-change bill shortly.
-By Cassandra Sweet, Dow Jones Newswires; 415-439-6468;
cassandra.sweet@dowjones.com