NRDC: Environmental Safeguards Under Attack
Just-Filed Bill Would Devastate Landscape, Hurt Wildlife
WASHINGTON (February 8, 2008) -- In a move that could prove disastrous for America’s forests, open lands and wildlife, Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin (D-S.D.) introduced a bill late Wednesday to strip environmental safeguards from the recently signed Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, according to scientists and policy experts from leading environmental and conservation organizations.
The organizations committed to fighting the attack on clean biofuels joined together with this statement:
“The Herseth bill would convert an important step forward on the environment into a giant leap backward. When accompanied by strong safeguards, renewable biofuels can help fuel America, curtail global warming, and reduce America’s dependence on oil.
“But the Herseth bill would strip critical environmental protections from the Energy Bill and turn biofuels done right into biofuels done dirty.
“The current law’s Renewable Fuels Standard marked an historic step forward for the development of clean, homegrown energy. It brought together environmental groups, agriculture producers and energy interests behind a set of provisions that support next-generation biofuels while incorporating a suite of crucial safeguards that help keep biofuels clean. The law includes the first ever Congressionally legislated global warming pollution standards.
“Now, less than two months later, a few voices are trying to turn Congress’ environmental victory on its head by stripping critical safeguards that keep biofuels from resulting in widespread environmental damage.
“Current law ensures fuel crops grown to meet the Energy Bill’s 36 billion gallon mandate do more good than harm. The Herseth bill would turn the mandate for more biofuels into a massive blow to our Nation’s natural resources, pushing production into sensitive wildlife, old-growth forests, remote wildlands, and other prized areas, and potentially encouraging the wholesale loss of native forests and grasslands.
“Americans want biofuels, but we’re not about to forsake the American landscape we treasure. Current law already provides incentives for plentiful biofuels crops, without putting our sensitive lands on the chopping block.”
Source: Natural Resources Defense Council
Related articles
- Bush Administration Refuses to Protect Endangered Species Habitat in Michigan and Missouri National Forests
- Bush Administration Strips Protections from America's Largest Forest
- BLM Exempts Oil and Gas Exploration from Environmental Review
- New Project to Increase Palm Oil Production in Cameroon and Nigeria
- Wisconsin Governor Doyle Announces Renewable Energy Advances at Flambeau River Papers
Latest stories
- Statement by Senator Barack Obama on EU Emergency Summit Meeting
- Barack Obama Statement on the Resignation of Japanese Prime Minister Fukuda
- Senator Barack Obama's Statement on the Third Anniversary of Hurricane Katrina
- Statement from Sarah and Todd Palin Regarding Unwed Teen Daughter's Pregnancy
- White House Press Gaggle by Dana Perino and FEMA Administrator Dave Paulison -- September 1, 2008
- Zimbabwe District Calls for Renewed Government Effort on Solar Energy
- Thousands of Anti-War Protesters March to Site of Republican Convention
- US: More than 11,000 Iraqi Detainees Released in 2008
- DoD Identifies Navy Casualty: Petty Officer 1st Class Joshua Harris, 36,of Lexington, North Carolina
- DoD Identifies Army Casualty: Spc. Steven J. Fitzmorris, 26, of Columbia, Missouri
Yes We Can
Yes We Can:

















