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April 16, 2009 5:03 PM PDT

U.S. Chamber wants Congress to limit legal challenges to energy projects

by Stephanie Condon

The Obama administration and Congress are determined to ratchet up the production of green energy in the United States, but that goal is being undermined by "radical environmental activism," the business community is trying to convince Washington.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce on Thursday stepped up its campaign for congressional action to streamline the production of clean-energy infrastructure by launching the Web site ProjectNoProject.com.

Too many infrastructure projects, including electric transmission lines and solar farms, the chamber says, are held up by what it refers to as "green tape": lengthy permitting processes, litigation from concerned local activists and environmental groups, and other hurdles like rezoning. In many cases, the chamber says, these challenges delay projects for so long that financing dries up and the projects are abandoned.

"If we're truly going to be a green society and begin deploying these projects, we're going to have to find a way to streamline these projects into commerce," said William Kovacs, the U.S. Chamber's vice president of environment, technology and regulatory affairs.

Within the last 18 months, around 65 projects have been substantially delayed or killed, he said.

The new Web site gives examples of delayed projects in each state, and it gives visitors a "grassroots toolkit" to promote the site. It also provides a link to a standard letter that visitors can send to Congress members to urge them to shorten the environmental permitting process and more strictly regulate litigation against green-energy projects.

The chamber is asking Congress to set a 270-day time limit for the environmental assessments that must be completed for a stimulus-funded green-energy project to move forward. The organization would also like to see some limits on litigation against these projects, such as a time limit on legal actions or limits on the number of appeals possible. Alternatively, the chamber may ask for adjustments to the litigating process, such as taking cases directly to a court of appeals.

"We're not trying to change anyone's rights," Kovacs said. "All we're saying is there has to be an end point."

The Sierra Club and other prominent groups have adamantly opposed some projects, such as San Diego Gas & Electric's proposed Sunrise Powerlink project, a 1,000-megawatt transmission line that would transfer geothermal energy from California's Imperial Valley to the San Diego area.

"The center pin at a bowling alley isn't better positioned to do more damage at once than this reckless scheme which would string a power line over eagles, waterfalls, and history," the Sierra Club said in its April newsletter (PDF).

The energy bill proposed by Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) is too tolerant of this kind of opposition, said Kovacs, since it has no limits on lawsuits against energy projects.

Janet Kavinoky, the chamber's director of transportation infrastructure, said the chamber's message is catching on around Capitol Hill and already has support from some members like Sens. John Barrasso (R-Wy.) and David Vitter (R-La.).

"We have heard from members interested in finding out what projects have been stopped in their states," she said.

Stephanie Condon is a staff writer for CNET News focused on the intersection of technology and politics. She is based in Washington, D.C. E-mail Stephanie.
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by TogetherinParis April 17, 2009 12:42 AM PDT
If the coal industry (most of these energy projects at projectnoproject.com are coal burning) wants to limit lawsuits, let it stop causing crime, drug addiction and perversion with coal plant air pollution! Aha! Nobody's suing them about that but they would be sued if people knew what I know. Air pollution is too high a burden for us to bear uncompensated. Once coal operators pay for the prisons, insane asylums and sex-change/pornography, they will go broke, naturally enough. It's like smoking and lung cancer. Coal plants and crime/addiction/perversion.
Reply to this comment
by ballmerisanape April 17, 2009 10:28 AM PDT
What the holy heck are you talking about... ???
by Mergatroid Mania April 17, 2009 10:38 AM PDT
Wow, it's a good thing YOU told us that, or else we would never have believed it.
by celticbrewer April 17, 2009 10:39 AM PDT
Dude, did you snort some coal dust or something? You're probably one of those radical environmentalist eco terrorists, huh?
by Gondo2k2 April 17, 2009 1:59 AM PDT
I dont even know where to start on how wrong your way of thinking is here. Is it me of are you saying that coal or atleast air pollution have something to do with sex-change and/or pornography? ***? I really hope for some strange reason read that or understood it wrong but im pretty sure the former has nothing to do what so ever with the latter. Where do you even get those ideas? lol maybe I am just tired and need sleep....
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by fewiii April 17, 2009 2:58 AM PDT
Unfortunately, too many environmental groups oppose "modern" technology, period, "green" or otherwise.
Reply to this comment
by terrylweb April 17, 2009 8:25 AM PDT
"The center pin at a bowling alley isn't better positioned to do more damage at once than this reckless scheme which would string a power line over eagles, waterfalls, and history," the Sierra Club said in its April newsletter.
Umm, I'm having a hard time with the images in this metaphor... anyone else?
Reply to this comment
by celticbrewer April 17, 2009 10:42 AM PDT
Thank you! I read that 5 times and still don't know what it really means. The power line is a bowling pin? or... the government.. or .... huh? Someone must have put some shrooms in their granola. God forbid we cut a hundred foot wide path among acres and acres to bring clean energy to the masses. for shame!
by jvandinter1 April 17, 2009 9:15 AM PDT
This site is a rouse to lobby against legitimate concerns about energy projects that are anything but green.. Both Idaho projects listed are coal fired power plants that would have grossly polluted the air. The Chamber is being lees than subtle about misusing the green movement to cover poorly planed projects that are environmental disasters.
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by Dr_Zinj April 17, 2009 10:38 AM PDT
There are a lot of environmentalists out there who are really luddites wrapped in flannel, jeans, and birkenstocks.

I'm not sure the 270 day limit to challenges is acceptable as some things don't come up until past that point that should dictate a project be killed. I can tell you that if people observed a housing lot for 365 days there'd be a lot less crap houses put up with leaking basements, blown off roofs, washed out driveways, etc.
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by Mergatroid Mania April 17, 2009 10:41 AM PDT
Looks to me like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce needs to separate out the non-green projects that have happly added themselves into the list.
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