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A Discussion on Clean Energy in Missoula
Posted by on October 22, 2010 at 11:42 AM EDTLast weekend I traveled to beautiful Missoula, Montana, to engage in a lively panel conversation about America’s energy future at the 20th Annual Conference for the Society of Environmental Journalists (SEJ). The conference, hosted by the University of Montana, drew journalists from across the country who focus on essential issues affecting our environment, and who were eager to discuss efforts underway to grow the clean energy economy.
Promoting a sustainable, clean energy economy that creates jobs is a priority for this Administration. We have shown our commitment through a $90 billion Recovery Act investment in renewable energy, and setting new fuel-economy and greenhouse gas emissions standards for vehicles, among other critical measures. We’re also leading by example by setting ambitious sustainability goals for Federal Agencies for energy efficiency, reducing greenhouse gas pollution, conserving water, and promoting sustainable communities.
Open conversations like the one we had at SEJ are crucial as we confront today’s environmental and economic challenges. Engaging people with a range of views and backgrounds helps us to achieve a shared vision of a healthy and prosperous future for the U.S. I left Missoula optimistic about America’s potential to seize the opportunity of clean energy.
Nancy Sutley is Chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality
Learn more about Energy and EnvironmentLeading by Example: VA Funds Solar Energy Projects at Hospitals, Clinics, Cemeteries
Posted by on October 22, 2010 at 9:44 AM EDTJust over a year ago, President Obama asked the Federal government to lead by example when he signed Executive Order 13514: Federal Leadership in Environmental, Energy, and Economic Performance. This Order directs federal agencies to set aggressive sustainability goals, and to promote “green practices” more generally. The Department of Veterans Affairs has responded enthusiastically to the President’s request. Indeed, we have long been leading by example in the area of environmental sustainability. For instance, as far back as 2005, when the Energy Policy Act ordered federal agencies to purchase 7.5 percent of their electricity from renewable sources by 2013, VA responded by setting its own target at 15 percent—double the mandated amount. This increased use of renewable energy also helps VA to accomplish another aggressive goal we have recently set ourselves: reducing our greenhouse gas emissions by 30% by 2020.
This week brings more good news regarding VA’s leadership in environmental performance, and its commitment to renewable energy in particular. On Monday, we proudly announced that we have awarded nearly $78 million in contracts to build solar photovoltaic (PV) systems at VA facilities nationwide.
Learn more about Energy and Environment, VeteransIowa Conservation Partnerships
Posted by on October 21, 2010 at 6:29 PM EDTOn Monday, I joined USDA Deputy Under Secretary for Natural Resources and Environment Ann Mills and USDA Legislative Director Tina May in Iowa to meet with the Iowa Soybean Association (ISA) and learn about their partnership-based efforts to support natural resource conservation. ISA is working with its members on a number of programs to enhance water quality. During our visit, we had the chance to see an on-farm water quality monitoring station and learn how farmers are reducing nitrate loading in the Boone River watershed. We also met with a farmer who has implemented strip-till practices and installed a bioreactor on his land, both of which help bolster watershed water quality. The trip certainly helped to further my understanding of on-farm energy use and the opportunities available in this arena. The visit to Iowa was educational, and I look forward to learning more about the energy and environmental initiatives of ISA and other agriculture organizations. It was a terrific experience!
Jess Maher is the Associate Director for Legislative Affairs at the White House Council on Environmental Quality
Learn more about Energy and EnvironmentBuilding Stronger, Sustainable Communities Through Strategic Coordination
Posted by on October 21, 2010 at 12:21 PM EDTThis morning at the National Press Club, I joined HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan, DOT Secretary Ray LaHood, and EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson to discuss the Partnership for Sustainable Communities. The Partnership is an initiative that brings together the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, and the U.S. Department of Transportation to ensure that the agencies’ policies, programs, and funding consider affordable housing, transportation, and environmental protection together. Founded on the idea that how and where we build our communities affects our economy, our environment, and our everyday lives, the Partnership is supporting communities that want to give Americans more housing choices, make transportation systems more efficient and reliable, and support vibrant neighborhoods that attract businesses. This is good for our communities and good for our economy.
Since June of 2009, the Partnership for Sustainable Communities has been building economic competitiveness by connecting housing with good jobs, quality schools and transportation. Examples include:
- EPA grants to develop area-wide plans for the reuse of formerly contaminated properties and targeted technical assistance to communities tackling growth and development issues;
- HUD Sustainable Community Regional Planning Grants to assist in the development and execution of regional plans that integrate affordable housing with neighboring retail and business development and realize more livable and sustainable communities across the country;
- DOT TIGER II Grants to fund innovative surface transportation projects that can improve communities’ quality of life while advancing broader transportation goals;
- And, awarded in conjunction with DOT’s TIGER II grants, HUD Community Challenge Planning Grants to support local planning activities that integrate transportation, housing, and economic development.
Coordinating federal investments in infrastructure, facilities, and services meets multiple economic, environmental, and community objectives with each dollar spent. At a time when every dollar the federal government invests in jumpstarting the economy is critical, the President’s plan ensures that all these agencies are coordinating efforts and targeting resources with precision. This collaboration gets better results for communities and uses taxpayer money more efficiently.
The Sustainable Communities Partnership is yet another foundational pillar of the President’s urban agenda; last month you learned more about the Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative. Both of these initiatives show that the federal government is doing business in a new way to more effectively serve the American people and our communities in urban, suburban and rural neighborhoods.
Learn more about Energy and Environment, Urban PolicyEmpowering Defense Through Energy Security
Posted by on October 18, 2010 at 4:18 PM EDTOn Oct. 13 the Department of Defense (DoD) hosted an Energy Security Forum as part of National Energy Awareness Month. We spent the day with leaders from the military services and the White House for a discussion on how the Department of Defense can turn our energy use from a strategic and operational challenge to a key strength for the warfighter.
Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, kicked off our discussion and reinforced the critical nature of energy security for the Department. “Energy security needs to be one of the first things we think about, before we deploy another soldier, before we build another ship or plane, and before we buy or fill another rucksack.”
Learn more about Defense, Energy and EnvironmentBlog Action Day: Protecting America’s Waters Today
Posted by on October 15, 2010 at 11:50 AM EDTEd. Note: As part Change.org's Blog Action Day, EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson reflects on the importance of protecting America's clean water supply.
When EPA was formed 40 years ago, water pollution was generally something that could be seen, touched, and smelled. We knew something was wrong when algae began to coat rivers, when the smell from untreated sewage reached our communities, or when massive fish kills appeared in lakes and streams. Perhaps the most famous example is the Cuyahoga River, which was so covered with pollution and industrial waste that in 1969 it literally caught fire.
Four decades later, we’ve seen considerable progress. The Clean Water and the Safe Drinking Water Acts have significantly reduced threats to our environment and our health. The widespread expansion of water infrastructure has brought clean, safe water to millions of Americans. And the Cuyahoga – along with a number of other water bodies – is cleaner than it has been in generations.
But this doesn’t mean we can take clean water for granted. While we have had success on traditional pollutants, there are other challenges to face in protecting America's waters today.
Contaminants and chemicals we’ve only recently had the science to detect move into our water supply from a variety of less-conventional places. Rather than gushing from the end of a pipe, pollution trickles from front lawns, city streets and parking lots. We can’t ask a single polluter to shut off its flow, so we have to find more creative solutions.
We’re working to find those solutions through efforts like our developing Urban Waters Initiative, and the Interagency Partnership for Sustainable Communities, in which EPA’s water protection investments will work in concert with housing and transportation investments from other agencies. We’re developing a strategy to incorporate green infrastructure into our clean water rules and actions, which will encourage strategies that work with nature – rather than against it – by using soil, vegetation, permeable materials and landscape changes to capture stormwater, filter contaminants, beautify communities, and reduce the runoff that flows into local waterways. We’ve issued clear guidance to protect Appalachian waters threatened by valley fills from mountaintop removal mining. And we’re working with the USDA and the agricultural community to reduce water impacts and encourage sustainable farming techniques.
Another issue we face is deferred maintenance in our infrastructure, which in too many communities is over-worked and under-budgeted. Our system is deeply stressed, our financial and our natural resources are limited and our needs are not negotiable.
The good news is that the Recovery Act provided almost $6 billion in funding for clean and drinking water projects. Those investments, along with EPA’s budget, comprise some of the strongest support for water infrastructure in recent memory. But if our water systems are going to work harder in the years ahead, we have to start working smarter today. Earlier this year I outlined a vision to improve drinking water protection by harnessing invention and innovation. I proposed enhancing efficiency by taking on water contaminants in groups, engaging innovators and entrepreneurs to develop new technology and using technology to improve information sharing and monitoring between federal, state and local authorities.
Finally, the BP spill has presented an unprecedented challenge as an emergency environmental response and a long-term restoration effort. I’m proud that President Obama has appointed me to lead the Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration Task Force. That single event has illustrated just how important clean water is to the health of our communities and our economy, and how entire ways of life count on clean water and a healthy environment. Those are the same reasons President Obama mobilized EPA and other federal agencies to revitalize cleanups in the Chesapeake Bay and the Great Lakes, and why we are recommitting to our work on other great waterbodies such as Puget Sound, Lake Tahoe, the San Francisco Bay Delta, as well as our oceans, estuaries and precious wetlands like the Florida Everglades.
Whether we face an immediate, emergency situation like the BP spill, or the gradual accumulation of challenges and degradation, our responsibilities to address the problems and find solutions are exactly the same. In each case, our efforts are focused on getting real, measurable results in the restoration of waterbodies that millions of people depend on.
In protecting America’s waters today, we have a responsibility to continue the work that began 40 years ago, and begin new work that will change the course of the next 40 years and beyond. This is what we have been doing since taking office, and what we plan on continuing to do in the months and years ahead.Learn more about Energy and Environment
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