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Related: About this forumClean Energy Experts to Offer Obama a Path Forward Without Congress
Clean Energy Experts to Offer Obama a Path Forward Without Congress
A new report will suggest 200 executive actions on climate and energy.
By Amy Harder and Clare ForanJanuary 20, 2014SHARE
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President Obama's efforts to sidestep Congress on environmental issues will get a big boost Tuesday from more than one hundred independent experts who will suggest some 200 ways he can build a legacy on climate change and clean energy through executive action.
Nearly a year in the making, a report from green-energy leaders will make recommendations for executive-branch actions in six areas: energy efficiency, renewable markets, renewable-energy financing, alternative-fueled vehicles, new business models, and natural-gas rule-makings.
"This is an exercise to have a group of people who are outside the Beltway think about how to help the president move a clean-energy agenda forward with a Congress that doesn't act," said Bill Ritter, a former Colorado governor who spearheaded the report as part of his work directing the Center for the New Energy Economy at Colorado State University.
"It isn't that the president can do all of this over the remainder of his second term; the thought is to give the president a menu of options," said Ritter, who would not disclose details of the report.
He and others, including Obama's former energy and climate adviser Heather Zichal...
A new report will suggest 200 executive actions on climate and energy.
By Amy Harder and Clare ForanJanuary 20, 2014SHARE
President Obama's efforts to sidestep Congress on environmental issues will get a big boost Tuesday from more than one hundred independent experts who will suggest some 200 ways he can build a legacy on climate change and clean energy through executive action.
Nearly a year in the making, a report from green-energy leaders will make recommendations for executive-branch actions in six areas: energy efficiency, renewable markets, renewable-energy financing, alternative-fueled vehicles, new business models, and natural-gas rule-makings.
"This is an exercise to have a group of people who are outside the Beltway think about how to help the president move a clean-energy agenda forward with a Congress that doesn't act," said Bill Ritter, a former Colorado governor who spearheaded the report as part of his work directing the Center for the New Energy Economy at Colorado State University.
"It isn't that the president can do all of this over the remainder of his second term; the thought is to give the president a menu of options," said Ritter, who would not disclose details of the report.
He and others, including Obama's former energy and climate adviser Heather Zichal...
http://www.nationaljournal.com/energy/what-obama-can-do-on-climate-change-without-congress-20140120
I haven't reviewed it yet, but the plan is available here:
http://cnee.colostate.edu/p/powering-forward
And this is the EPA action on coal they refer to in the NJ article:
EPA Publishes First Rule Limiting Carbon Pollution From New Power Plants
http://www.democraticunderground.com/112762039
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Clean Energy Experts to Offer Obama a Path Forward Without Congress (Original Post)
kristopher
Jan 2014
OP
kristopher
(29,798 posts)1. Intro to the report
I'm hoping we'll hear some of this in the SOTU
http://cnee.colostate.edu/graphics/uploads/FINAL----CNEE_Powering-Forward_Full-Report.pdf
100 CEOs, CFOs, academics, researchers, NGOs & government leaders pinpoint
climate and energy security imperatives
In his 2013 State of the Union address, President Barack Obama told Congress that if it did not act to curb global climate change, he would.
And he did. Five months later, the President issued a comprehensive climate action plan that does not require congressional action. Many of the items already have been implemented or put in motion.
The Presidents plan adds to the long list of initiatives his administration has accomplished since 2009, ranging from
historic vehicle efficiency standards to the regulation of greenhouse gas emissions from power plants.
Are there additional steps the President can take in the next three years to mitigate climate change and move America closer to a clean energy economy? The answer is yes. But they will require considerable work by the administration and support from the American people. They will also require steps by the President to unleash enterprise and investment across the country.
In March 2013 President Obama met with 14 energy thought leaders, representing a variety of stakeholder groups, to discuss how he could further pursue a clean energy agenda using his lawful authority. Following the meeting, the leaders asked the Center for the New Energy Economy (CNEE - the Center I founded in 2011 at Colorado State University) to undertake a deeper examination of the Presidents options in five discrete areas. In response, CNEE launched an eight-month initiative to gather ideas for additional presidential action on climate and clean energy. In dialogues, roundtables and peer reviews, CNEE engaged more than 100 participants, including chief executive officers, chief financial officers and other top executives from industry, academia, research institutions, NGOs and state and local governments. We asked them what new actions by the President and his executive agencies would help our nation be more effective in meeting our climate and our energy goals.
The five areas of focus are:
1. Doubling energy productivity
2. Financing renewable energy
3. Producing natural gas responsibly
4. Developing alternative fuels and vehicles, and
5. Enabling electric and gas utilities to adapt to the new realities of the 21st century

Two rules governed this process. First, we applied the Chatham House Rule, ensuring participants anonymity to encourage open dialogue and free exchange of ideas. In accordance with that rule, we have not attributed ideas to specific individuals or organizations. Second, we encouraged but did not require consensus. Not all participants agreed with all of the recommendations in our final report, but everyone had a substantive voice in the process.
Four principal themes emerged during the CNEE exercise:
1. As CEO of the nations largest energy customerthe Federal Governmentand CommanderinChief of the armed forces, the President should use the full power of federal procurement to help create the large and stable markets that will attract more investment in clean energy goods and services. That will require changes in the procurement system.
2. Many of the most important legal responsibilities related to energy use and carbon emissions reside in states and localities. The Federal Government should help states and localities assert their leadership with increased research, technical assistance and carefully targeted financial assistance.
3. The Federal Government and its policies will have to be retooled to support a clean en- ergy economy. For example, many industry leaders who are eager to participate in the energy transition say they are inhibited by government regulations that are not keeping up with todays rapid changes in energy technology and customer preferences.
4. The administration can make strategic changes in fiscal policy to help move private capital at every level of the economy off the sidelines and into clean energy.
This report offers President Obama and his administration more than 200 recommendations for Americas transition to a clean energy economy recommendations that CNEE believes can be implemented with the Presidents existing authority. Many of the recommendations can be implemented immediately; some will take several months; and others may not be completed until after President Obama leaves office.
President Obama deserves credit for his resolve to take action on climate change. This report is intended to help him. There simply is no more important issue and no time to waste.
Bill Ritter, Jr.
41st Governor of Colorado
Founder and Director, Center for the New Energy Economy
climate and energy security imperatives
In his 2013 State of the Union address, President Barack Obama told Congress that if it did not act to curb global climate change, he would.
And he did. Five months later, the President issued a comprehensive climate action plan that does not require congressional action. Many of the items already have been implemented or put in motion.
The Presidents plan adds to the long list of initiatives his administration has accomplished since 2009, ranging from
historic vehicle efficiency standards to the regulation of greenhouse gas emissions from power plants.
Are there additional steps the President can take in the next three years to mitigate climate change and move America closer to a clean energy economy? The answer is yes. But they will require considerable work by the administration and support from the American people. They will also require steps by the President to unleash enterprise and investment across the country.
In March 2013 President Obama met with 14 energy thought leaders, representing a variety of stakeholder groups, to discuss how he could further pursue a clean energy agenda using his lawful authority. Following the meeting, the leaders asked the Center for the New Energy Economy (CNEE - the Center I founded in 2011 at Colorado State University) to undertake a deeper examination of the Presidents options in five discrete areas. In response, CNEE launched an eight-month initiative to gather ideas for additional presidential action on climate and clean energy. In dialogues, roundtables and peer reviews, CNEE engaged more than 100 participants, including chief executive officers, chief financial officers and other top executives from industry, academia, research institutions, NGOs and state and local governments. We asked them what new actions by the President and his executive agencies would help our nation be more effective in meeting our climate and our energy goals.
The five areas of focus are:
1. Doubling energy productivity
2. Financing renewable energy
3. Producing natural gas responsibly
4. Developing alternative fuels and vehicles, and
5. Enabling electric and gas utilities to adapt to the new realities of the 21st century

Two rules governed this process. First, we applied the Chatham House Rule, ensuring participants anonymity to encourage open dialogue and free exchange of ideas. In accordance with that rule, we have not attributed ideas to specific individuals or organizations. Second, we encouraged but did not require consensus. Not all participants agreed with all of the recommendations in our final report, but everyone had a substantive voice in the process.
Four principal themes emerged during the CNEE exercise:
1. As CEO of the nations largest energy customerthe Federal Governmentand CommanderinChief of the armed forces, the President should use the full power of federal procurement to help create the large and stable markets that will attract more investment in clean energy goods and services. That will require changes in the procurement system.
2. Many of the most important legal responsibilities related to energy use and carbon emissions reside in states and localities. The Federal Government should help states and localities assert their leadership with increased research, technical assistance and carefully targeted financial assistance.
3. The Federal Government and its policies will have to be retooled to support a clean en- ergy economy. For example, many industry leaders who are eager to participate in the energy transition say they are inhibited by government regulations that are not keeping up with todays rapid changes in energy technology and customer preferences.
4. The administration can make strategic changes in fiscal policy to help move private capital at every level of the economy off the sidelines and into clean energy.
This report offers President Obama and his administration more than 200 recommendations for Americas transition to a clean energy economy recommendations that CNEE believes can be implemented with the Presidents existing authority. Many of the recommendations can be implemented immediately; some will take several months; and others may not be completed until after President Obama leaves office.
President Obama deserves credit for his resolve to take action on climate change. This report is intended to help him. There simply is no more important issue and no time to waste.
Bill Ritter, Jr.
41st Governor of Colorado
Founder and Director, Center for the New Energy Economy