ENSURING CLIMATE CHANGE IS INCLUDED IN NATIONAL ENERGY POLICY & PLANNING The United States does not have, and, in reality, has never had,
a comprehensive national energy policy that has been deliberated as a whole by the American people.
Given our nation's need to control energy costs and improve energy security, many policymakers are calling for
a comprehensive national energy policy that promotes and develops all of America's own energy resources — conventional and shale natural gas, oil, wind, nuclear, solar, etc. — to diversify energy supply.
So today, my administration is releasing a Blueprint for a Secure Energy Future that outlines
a comprehensive national energy policy, one that we've been pursuing since the day I took office.
Not exact matches
... In contrast to China, some argue that the United States does not have a
comprehensive national policy in place for promotion of renewable
energy technologies..»
Research groups (MIT, RTI, and the Department of
Energy's Pacific Northwest
National Laboratories [PNNL]-RRB- have also analyzed the economic impacts of a generic
comprehensive, economy - wide climate
policy to reduce GHG emissions 50 - 80 % by the year 2050.
These city - led efforts to catalyze local clean
energy economic development are important to watch as federal grants sunset, especially in the absence of a
comprehensive national energy or climate
policy.
Dr. Romm helped lead the administration's climate technology
policy formulation, and initiated, supervised, and publicized a
comprehensive technical analysis by five
national laboratories of how
energy technologies can reduce greenhouse gas emissions at low - cost: Scenarios of U.S. Carbon Reductions.
They highlight fundamental and persistent challenges in the United States to the use of
energy efficiency as a potent tool for efforts to mitigate climate change, strengthen
national energy security, and realize the economic benefits of a
comprehensive, forward - thinking
energy policy.