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Senate Armed Services Committee Reins In Pentagon On Alternative Fuel Spending

By DONNA CASSATA   05/25/12 04:34 PM ET  AP

WASHINGTON -- The Pentagon's investment in green energy requires too much green paper for some in Congress.

A sharply divided Senate Armed Services Committee voted this week to prohibit the military from spending money on alternative fuels if the cost exceeds traditional fossil fuels such as coal, natural gas and oil. The move underscores congressional concern about the greater expense of clean energy sources such as biofuels as the Pentagon wrestles with smaller budgets. The committee, in crafting a sweeping defense budget for next year, also voted to block Pentagon construction of a biofuels refinery or any other facility to refine biofuels.

Both efforts passed on 13-12 votes that were disclosed Friday.

"In a tough budget climate for the Defense Department, we need every dollar to protect our troops on the battlefield with energy technologies that reduce fuel demand and save lives," said Sen. John McCain of Arizona, the top Republican on the Armed Services Committee. "Spending $26 per gallon of biofuel is not consistent with that goal. The committee's action corrects this misplacement of priorities."

The moves by the Senate panel follow even tougher steps in the Republican-controlled House challenging the Pentagon's investment in clean energy. That version of the defense bill would bar the military from buying alternative fuels if the cost exceeds traditional fossil fuels. The bill also exempts the Pentagon from some requirements under the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, which is designed to increase production of clean renewable fuels.

The law stipulates that if a federal department or agency uses alternative fuels, they cannot produce more greenhouse gases than regular petroleum.

In threatening to veto the House bill, the White House said it objected to provisions that would affect the Defense Department's "ability to procure alternative fuels and would further increase American reliance on fossil fuels, thereby contributing to geopolitical instability and endangering our interests aboard."

The department is the nation's largest consumer of energy, spending about $15 billion last year on fuel for tanks, ships, aircraft and other operations. In Afghanistan, the military uses more than 50 million gallons of fuel each month.

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta recently said higher fuel costs have hit the Pentagon hard, creating a budget shortfall of more than $3 billion.

The Navy and Air Force have pushed to use more biofuels to operate its aircraft and ships, with military leaders suggesting a greater reliance on alternative sources in the next decade to ease dependence on foreign oil.

The Pentagon is pushing for $1.4 billion in next year's budget for investments in clean energy, including hybrid electric drives for ships, more efficient engines, better generators and solar power.

"As one of the largest landowners and energy consumers in the world, our drive is to be more efficient and environmentally sustainable," Panetta said in a speech earlier this month to the Environmental Defense Fund. "We have to be able to have the potential to transform the nation's approach to the challenges we are facing in the environment and energy security. We've got to look ahead to try to see how we can best achieve that."

Panetta went as far as to suggest that environmental threats stand as threats to national security.

"The area of climate change has a dramatic impact on national security: Rising sea levels, to severe droughts, to the melting of the polar caps, to more frequent and devastating natural disasters all raise demand for humanitarian assistance and disaster relief," he said.

Days later, Republican Sen. Jim Inhofe challenged Panetta's comments.

"Secretary Panetta has a real war to win, and he should not be wasting time perpetrating President Obama's global warming fantasies or his ongoing war on affordable energy," said the Oklahoma lawmaker. "At a time when the defense budget is being significantly reduced and the Pentagon is forced to make every dollar stretch even further, it is ludicrous for the DOD to spend billions of dollars on green energy projects. Instead, they should be using those funds on people, training and equipment."

It was Inhofe and McCain, who successfully pushed for the amendments limiting Pentagon investments in clean energy.

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WASHINGTON -- The Pentagon's investment in green energy requires too much green paper for some in Congress. A sharply divided Senate Armed Services Committee voted this week to prohibit the military ...
WASHINGTON -- The Pentagon's investment in green energy requires too much green paper for some in Congress. A sharply divided Senate Armed Services Committee voted this week to prohibit the military ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Frank J Savel III
08:15 PM on 08/01/2012
The NAVY has always led the way sail to coal power (1850), coal to oil (~1920), oil to Nuke (1953) and now 2012 oil, nuke, to bio-fuels. Today more military are killed protecting oil supply lines then in battle! They are doing it to improve the odds of winning the next war This is not a game.
12:00 PM on 05/29/2012
This is proof that the republican party serves the oil companies.  They'll put oil company profits ahead of even the military's needs.  Clearly, the republicans are T R A I T O R S.
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NealHib
The war on drugs is a corporate war
11:50 PM on 05/28/2012
This is big oil being threatened by alternative energy.
04:43 PM on 05/28/2012
Our choice to make the transition from fossil fuels to alternative energy sources is a sensitive issue for many. Clearly, we would like to be environmentally progressive but we are still very reliant on a resources that have been the cornerstone of the American economy. Getting rid of it is coming as a major blow to both its dependents and its suppliers. This transition is going to put us in the middle of an uphill battle in this economic recovery.
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08:26 PM on 05/28/2012
No battle , make this new wonder fuel available , compatible with what we have and priced somewhere close to our existing fuel ! Not everyone can afford a car that can only go forty miles per charge and less with a stop at the food store .
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NealHib
The war on drugs is a corporate war
11:49 PM on 05/28/2012
Add in the cost of the wars waged to get oil and alternative energy is very affordable.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PaulBardinas
Educating one person at a time.
02:07 PM on 05/29/2012
Funny, my Leaf gets 100+ miles per charge and no one ever said that everyone should drive electric cars. Hybrids get 50mpg and go 500 miles on a 10 gallon tank.
04:18 PM on 05/28/2012
We need to stop living in the past. a new form of energy already exists that is far more efficient and sustainable and powerful than anything currently on the market, the best part is it doesn't pollute. if we want to save the planet we need to open our eyes and wake up.
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/261360616/sirius
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
organicconnect
03:04 PM on 05/28/2012
I guess we should recognize that GOP these days stands for "Government On Petroleum" or maybe "Gaga On Petrochemicals." It's reaching I know, but this transparent special interest crap gets tiresome.
09:33 AM on 05/28/2012
Would alternate fuel cost more if congress didn't give away billions of dollars to the oil companies? Fire Congress, get people who can not only think but act and do their jobs. Not like these corporate owned and paid for Republican Congress.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
idisVA
12:42 AM on 05/28/2012
The Republican position has more to do with their opposition to the development of clean fuel than on the cost. They are wasting billions of dollars on air planes that the military says they do not need.
09:09 PM on 05/27/2012
I see more of America being sold to other Countries, this is crazy. They invest billions in a new weapon yet won't invest a cent in alternative fuels.
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BluePhantom2
The Blacksmith & the Artist reflected in their art
07:49 PM on 05/27/2012
While the US military was a great place to conduct social experiments on race (And they worked quite well!) the green energy boondoogle is of a different stripe. I have read lately that the Navy was doing experiments with ships using biofuels on the west coast, and that there were plans to have an entire battle group (About 20 ships) do a deployement using nothing but biofuels. I have no problem with the test but biofuel cost about 8-10 times as much as conventional fuel and the idea of 20 ships doing a six or seven month deployment seemed a bit extreme so I see why congress nixed this. As to the hybrid electric drive that is something that is being done now as two class's of ships currently under construction have it.
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artleads
Let's have a national retreat.
05:40 PM on 05/27/2012
And the reason for voting GOP is...what exactly?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alteredstory
Hold on to the center
02:42 PM on 05/27/2012
This is bull - they have NO problem with the Pentagon spending billions on useless stuff like fighter jets we NEVER use, or wars in countries that are no threat to us.
02:20 PM on 05/27/2012
Looks like there aren't enough good reasons to quit our addiction to oil. Not the sight of BP-oil-soaked pelicans and decimated Gulf fisheries, not the looming specter of climate change, not even the sacrifice of our young troops -- evidently these are acceptable sacrifices in a world where greed's gone wild.

Perhaps if we knew the big picture -- the aggregate cost of our addiction -- the lives lost, the irrevocable damage to our environment, the security risks, the unfathomable military spending and the massive corruption and profiteering, we might wake up and ween ourselves off the most pervasive drug this world has ever known.
02:30 PM on 05/27/2012
**wean**
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
IPredictARiot
US Military = largest socialist entity on earth
02:02 PM on 05/27/2012
Yes, biofuels currently cost more, but with research and production, that price will drop.

The military's decision to use (newly-developed but not yet produced) Integrated Circuits in the 1950's and 1960's for Minuteman missiles and the Apollo missions singlehandedly created the demand necessary to produce the world's first IC's. The government also spent the equivalent of $500M just in helping Texas Instruments ramp up production and to refine the IC design for government uses. Imagine if these Senators had been from "vacuum tube" producing States back then and decided to manipulate Defense spending to benefit their entrenched interests?

You wouldn't be reading this today.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
IPredictARiot
US Military = largest socialist entity on earth
01:45 PM on 05/27/2012
Yes, it costs more, but implicit in that cost is the idea that the supply CANNOT be cut off by OPEC countries, many of whom teeter on being potential enemies.

For an industry that doesn't understand the word "cost" and spends profligate amounts of money while wrapped in a flag, they sure picked a stupid time to decide to start putting in cost controls. $500 hammers and $20,000 transmission drip pans are no cost problem (with minimal benefits), but they choose to ignore the security benefits of producing our own fuel.

How about you at least include the real cost of oil in those fuel cost calculations, and don't forget to include the ridiculous defense budget that we spend simply defending supply lines and crucial straits? But no, that would work against the fossil-fuel states. Heaven forbid.

I hope the White House vetoes the hell out of any bill that cuts our ability to research making our own fuel. Long-term, biofuels can be as cheap as fossil fuels - the military spend billions of dollars making fossil fuels feasible for jets and vehicles, there is NO reason on earth we shouldn't do it for biofuels, too.
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SkiingGator
Searching for the Castle Anthrax
03:36 PM on 05/27/2012
Excellent argument