Exelon Urges Climate Action, Vows To Quit US Chamber
29 9월 2009 - 2:38AM
Dow Jones News
Exelon Corp. (EXC) on Monday urged lawmakers and industry groups
to work toward passing climate-change legislation and said it was
quitting the U.S. Chamber of Commerce over the group's opposition
to climate-change legislation pending in Congress.
Chicago-based Exelon, the nation's largest nuclear-power plant
operator, said the U.S. government needs to set climate-change
policy promptly, in part to "put a price on carbon," or allow
energy markets to attach a price on cutting one ton of carbon
dioxide, or its equivalent.
"The carbon-based free lunch is over," Exelon Chairman and Chief
Executive John W. Rowe said in a statement. "But while we can't fix
our climate problems for free, the price signal sent through a
cap-and-trade system will drive low-carbon investments in the most
inexpensive and efficient way possible."
Exelon's decision to quit the U.S. Chamber of Commerce follows a
similar move by utility PG&E Corp. (PCG) last week. Both
utilities have smaller carbon footprints than many of their peers,
particularly companies that operate large fleets of coal-fired
power plants. Coal plants produce roughly twice the greenhouse-gas
emissions of similarly sized natural gas-fired plants. Nuclear
power plants emit almost no greenhouse-gas emissions.
The U.S. Chamber has been a vocal critic of climate legislation
pending in the Senate, recently suggesting that the U.S. hold a
"Scopes-like" trial to debate evidence that climate change is
man-made.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has dismissed the
Chamber's proposal, saying that its own proposed finding that
global warming poses a danger to public health is based on sound
science.
Despite their differences, U.S. power companies, represented by
lobbyist group Edison Electric Institute, banded together in
support of climate-change legislation that passed the U.S. House of
Representatives earlier this year. A similar bill is pending in the
U.S. Senate.
Rowe of Exelon said climate-change legislation should focus on
conserving energy by increasing efficiency.
-By Cassandra Sweet, Dow Jones Newswires; 415-439-6468;
cassandra.sweet@dowjones.com