News of the Refuge & budget--Phyllis Mains
Very good news
indeed!!!
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ENVIRONMENT & ENERGY
DAILY
Update for Wednesday a.m. March 3, 2004
1
BUDGET/ANWR
Lawmakers to keep Arctic drilling out of FY '05 budget
Mary O'Driscoll,
Environment & Energy Daily senior reporter
Neither the Senate
nor House versions of the FY '05 budget resolution will include a controversial
plan to raise revenues from oil drilling in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge.
"Until we know
it's actually doable and passable, at least for now, we don't have it in the
savings," House Budget Committee Chairman Jim Nussle (R-Iowa) told reporters
yesterday.
On the Senate
side, Appropriations Committee Chairman Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), long an advocate
for drilling in the Arctic, said the issue is not yet dead, but he added it
would not come up in this Congress.
"That's one of my favorite dreams," he said of including Arctic
drilling in the budget resolution. "I dream it will happen, but I don't expect
it to."
The decision to
keep ANWR oil exploration out of the FY '05 budget comes days after Republicans
and Democrats from both the House and the Senate notified budget writers that
they would oppose efforts to raise FY '05 revenues through drilling (E&E
Daily <http://www.eenews.net/EEDaily/Backissues/030204/030204d.htm#2>
, March 2, 2004).
Environmentalists said they were pleased with the news. "The budget
is going to be so contentious anyway," said Anna Aurilio of Public
Citizen.
The congressional
budget resolution sets spending caps for the upcoming FY '05 appropriations
bills. Budget-writing lawmakers will be working off President Bush's budget
request of $818 billion in discretionary spending for FY '05, a plan that
squeezes most major environmental and energy programs as part of an overall goal
to keep nondefense domestic appropriations during the upcoming budget process to
1 percent growth. The Senate Budget Committee is not expected to allow more than
$814 billion in discretionary spending.
Bush's discretionary spending request is up $32 billion from the
nearly $786 billion approved in FY '04.
The annual budget resolution, which Congress hopes to complete by
the end of this month, limits the amount of money that can be spent by the
government and sets the sources of funding for federal programs. The Bush
administration's FY '05 federal budget calls for $2.4 billion to be raised in FY
'06 from oil leasing in ANWR; the revenue would be evenly split between Alaska
and the federal government.
Current law prohibits oil drilling in ANWR. To get around that, an
ANWR drilling policy could be "reconciled" in separate legislation if there are
instructions to do so in the budget resolution. That would make ANWR drilling
language not subject to a filibuster, the Senate procedure that has doomed
previous efforts to open up ANWR to oil and gas exploration.
Earlier efforts to use the
reconciliation process have failed. For instance, the Senate last year voted
52-48 to strike from its FY '04 budget resolution provisions that would have
facilitated passage of ANWR development. That vote came after six GOP senators
recorded their opposition to the proposal. It is unclear what the effects will
be on a potential Senate vote with five instead of six GOP senators stating
their opposition to a potential ANWR provision.
Similar efforts to include ANWR revenue in the budget
also have failed in each of the past three years in the House Budget
Committee.
Senior
Reporter Darren Samuelsohn contributed to this report.
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