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Knowles Slams Senate
Democrat's Energy Bill
Legislation Fails to Meet Energy, Job Needs of the Nation, Alaska
December 5, 2001 - Gov. Tony Knowles sharply criticized
national energy legislation introduced in the U.S. Senate saying the Democratic
plan fails to meet the energy and job needs of the nation and Alaska.
While claiming to back development of a natural gas pipeline to the lower
48, Knowles said the bill sponsored by Senators Tom Daschle and Jeff Bingaman
fails to take necessary steps to ensure gasline development and ignores
the nation's need for new domestic oil development.
"Today’s long-awaited energy bill contributes more to
Washington’s rhetoric than the nation’s energy needs," Knowles said. "The
bill fails to specify that the Alaska Highway project is the only environmentally
sound route that will put America to work and supply American consumers
with reliable, affordable energy."
Knowles noted that the bill was drafted without consulting
with Alaska and fails to include any of the specific recommendations developed
by environmental, Native, business, and civic leaders that Knowles presented
when he testified before the Senate Energy Committee in October.
"With little more than a vague reference to the use of
American labor and steel in the project, this legislation turns its back
on American jobs at time when the nation is in recession," Knowles said.
"By failing to be route specific, 30,000 high-paying jobs a year in steel
mills, transportation, engineering, and construction are being delayed
by at least a decade."
The bill ignores previous Congressional action in 1977
that designated the Alaska Highway as the preferred route for the natural
gas pipeline, Knowles said. It also ignores environmental concerns regarding
the so-called "over the top" route and the strong concerns of Inupiat
residents of the North Slope about use of the northern route beneath the
Beaufort Sea.
"The bill contains another major flaw no provision
for the environmentally responsible development of oil and gas beneath
a small portion of the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
designated by Congress to be studied for oil and gas development," Knowles
added. "Alaska has proven we know how to do development right. All Americans
deserve an honest up or down vote in the U.S. Senate on ANWR development."
Knowles said that legislation is needed now to address
critical energy needs in the nation and boost the economy.
"The
momentum behind construction of the Alaska Highway natural gas pipeline
has picked up steam with strong interest by America’s leading pipeline
companies and their plans to propose a finance and construction package
by year’s end." Knowles said. "My administration will continue full speed
ahead working with the producers, pipeline companies, and other potential
private sector partners to make the Alaska Highway natural gas pipeline
commercial."
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