FEINGOLD
SUPPORTS EFFORT TO BOOST RENEWABLE ENERGY
Joins Bipartisan Effort to Ensure Clean Energy Tax Incentives Don’t
Expire at the End of the Year
January 30, 2008
Washington, D.C. –
U.S. Senator Russ Feingold is part of a bipartisan group of senators
working to give a boost to renewable energy and energy efficiency. In
a letter to Senate leadership, Feingold and his colleagues called for
an extension of clean energy tax incentives, set to expire at the end
of the year, as a way to encourage the growth of “green jobs.”
The incentives are set to expire this year, and renewable energy companies
are already reporting a decrease in investment due to the uncertainty
of the incentives. The letter was signed by a bipartisan group of 32
other senators.
“We should constantly
be trying to find ways to boost renewable energy, improve energy efficiency,
and move away from our dependence on oil,” Feingold said. “These
tax incentives are a great way to invest in the creation of green jobs
– jobs that invest in renewable energy, get people working to
improve energy efficiency, and help bring down the skyrocketing energy
costs burdening so many American families.” According to industry
estimates, more than 100,000 Americans could be put to work in 2008
with clean energy production tax credits.
The clean energy and energy
efficiency tax incentives were first authorized in the Energy Policy
Act of 2005, but they will all be expired by the end of 2008. Feingold
supports renewing these tax incentives to promote renewable energy and
improve energy efficiency (such as in buildings, appliances, and other
technologies), as well as providing additional funding for weatherizing
homes.
“These tax incentives
will build on the recently enacted energy bill, which I supported, to
set our nation’s energy policy in a new direction,” Feingold
said. “We need to continue encouraging innovative approaches to
meeting our nation’s energy needs like technology that lowers
residential energy costs, generates new manufacturing and construction
jobs, and is environmentally sustainable.”
A copy of the letter can
be viewed here.
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