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House Passes Bill to End Subsidies for Big
Oil
On the national front, Democrats wasted no time in passing legislation to end subsidies for big oil and open new investments in renewable energy.
With the January 18th
passage of the Clean Energy Act of 2007, the bill would repeal
$14 billion in subsidies and tax breaks for Big Oil companies in
order to invest in clean, renewable, alternative fuels & energy
efficiency. The bill passed by a vote of 264 to 123.
Congressman Bart Stupak, who
co-sponsored the bill, noted "last year, the five biggest oil companies
made $97 billion dollars, nearly five times their profits in
2002. These record profits were bolstered by excessive tax breaks,
generous subsidies, and being allowed to drill on public land without
reimbursing taxpayers. In the meantime, Americans were gouged at the
pump last summer, as gas prices rose to over $3.00 per gallon."
The bill would ensure oil companies
awarded leases for drilling on public lands pay their air share in
royalties to the federal government. It would also close loopholes,
ending giveaways for big oil that exist in the tax code. The bill would
redirect funds from these tax breaks and special subsidies towards
clean, renewable energy resources and alternative fuels, promote new
energy technologies, develop greater efficiency and improve energy
conservation.
The measure now moves on to the United
States Senate.
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