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"A
climate bill will inch closer to the Senate floor tomorrow when Senate Environment
and Public Works Committee Chairman Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) will propose
changes including $800 billion in tax cuts through 2050 as well as an additional
$911 billion through 2050 to protect consumers from utility bill increases
by promoting energy efficiency and giving out rebates.
Boxer's substitute proposal amends a bill co-sponsored by Sens. John
W. Warner (R-Va.) and Joseph I. Lieberman (I-Conn.). Their version did not
include tax cuts, which need to be spelled out by the Finance Committee,
and Boxer's version increases money for rebates and energy efficiency by
40 percent.
If adopted, climate legislation would result in a price for carbon, placing
extra costs on anyone burning fossil fuels. In an effort to blunt criticism
of the bill from businesses that would be hurt by that provision, Boxer's
version channels $213 billion to energy-intensive businesses through 2015.
The bill would help manufacturers of automobiles, glass, steel, paper, cement,
chemicals and ceramics as well as fossil-fuel generators and commercial
fleet owners." (Steven Mufson, The Washington Post, May 20, 2008)
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