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US Energy Department Announces $58 Million to Advance Fuel-Efficient Vehicle Technologies

WASHINGTON – U.S. Department of Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz announced more than $58 million in funding for vehicle technology advancements and released a report highlighting the successes of DOE’s Advanced Technology Vehicles Manufacturing (ATVM) loan program while touring the newest vehicle technologies at the Washington Auto Show today.

Continuing the Obama Administration’s commitment to supporting the domestic automobile industry, Secretary Moniz announced a $55 million funding opportunity that will solicit projects across vehicle technologies like energy storage, electric drive systems, materials, fuels and lubricants and advanced combustion. Secretary Moniz also announced that two innovative projects at CALSTART and the National Association of Regional Councils will receive $3 million to develop systems that help companies combine their purchasing of advanced vehicles, components, and infrastructure to reduce incremental cost and achieve economies of scale.

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Waste Connections to buy Progressive Waste for $2.67B

By Kristin Musulin, Waste Dive. 

  • Texas-based Waste Connections announced Tuesday that it will purchase Canada's Progressive Waste Solutions for $2.67 billion as a way to expand throughout Canada.
  • The companies will merge in an all-stock deal. Waste Connections shareholders will own about 70% of the company, while Progressive Waste shareholders will own about 30%. 
  • The merged company will have a pro-forma revenue of about $4.1 billion, as reported by Seeking Alpha, and will be domiciled in Canada after the deal closes in this year's second quarter.

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Energy Bill Could Hit Senate Floor This Month, Aide Says

By Ari Natter, Bloomberg BNA.

Jan. 14 — A broad energy bill that includes language to expedite the federal approval process for liquefied natural gas exports could be brought to the Senate floor by month's end, a Republican leadership aide told Bloomberg BNA Jan. 14.

While it is “certainly possible” legislation could be on the floor this month, the aide cautioned in an e-mail that there is “nothing locked” in place yet.

Multiple lobbyists told Bloomberg BNA that the bill was could be brought to the floor after the Senate acts on legislation related to Syrian refugee policy, possibly the week of Jan. 25.

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Power to the poop: one Colorado city is using human waste to run its vehicles

By Melanie Sevcenko, The Guardian.

No matter how you spin it, the business of raw sewage isn’t sexy. But in Colorado, the city of Grand Junction is making huge strides to reinvent their wastewater industry – and the result is like finding a diamond in the sludge.

The Persigo Wastewater Treatment Plant is processing 8m gallons of Grand Junction’s human waste into renewable natural gas (RNG), also known as biomethane. The RNG is then used to fuel about 40 fleet vehicles, including garbage trucks, street sweepers, dump trucks and transit buses.

It’s possible through a process called anaerobic digestion, which breaks down organic matter into something called raw biogas. The biogas is then collected and upgraded to RNG – at pipeline quality – and can be used as electricity, heat or transportation fuel.

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Republican Presidential Field Tilts Rightward on Climate Change

By Amy Harder and Beth Reinhard, The Wall Street Journal.

Shortly after a conservative website on Wednesday posted 2008 footage of Sen. Marco Rubio backing a cap-and-trade program to combat climate change, his campaign roared back with a counterattack that included an entire web page aimed at debunking the video.

Mr. Rubio’s muscular response revealed how toxic the issue of climate change has become in the Republican Party under President Barack Obama, who has sought to make reducing carbon emissions to alleviate global warming one of his signature accomplishments.

As speaker of the Florida House, Mr. Rubio did vote for a 2008 bill authorizing the state to come up with rules for a cap-and-trade plan, though he raised questions about its cost and effectiveness. A press release from the House Majority Office at the time described the bill as a “responsible response to concerns about global climate change.”

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EPA: Clean energy adds jobs

By John Seewer, Associated Press, via The Columbus Dispatch.

PERRYSBURG, Ohio — Ohio and other states that are pushing back against clean energy are missing a chance to add jobs and revive their economy, the head of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said this week.

EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy said moving toward solar and wind energy is not just good for the environment.

“People need to understand clean energy is here,” she said on Thursday while touring a solar plant near Toledo, where about 6,000 people in the region work in the industry. “It’s growing jobs; it’s creating innovation.”

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Oregon lawmakers introduce cap-and-trade bill, but success seen doubtful

By Stian Reklev and Mike Szabo, Carbon Pulse.

Two Oregon state senators on Thursday introduced draft legislation that would establish a state-wide cap-and-trade scheme from 2020, but sources said the bill stands little chance of surviving.

The Healthy Climate Act, introduced by Democrats Chris Edwards and Lee Beyer, would establish a carbon market to help Oregon meet a target of cutting GHG emissions to 75% below 1990 levels by 2050. It would also set intermediary targets of 20% below 1990 levels by 2025, and 45% below by 2035.

But a legislative source told Carbon Pulse that, in light of a recent agreement between the state’s largest utilities and environmental campaigners to all but phase out the use of coal-fired power by 2030, he would be surprised if the Edwards-Beyer bill made it out of committee.

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The candidates and media are getting the Iowa ethanol debate all wrong

By Michelle Ye Hee Lee, The Washington Post.

Question: “Are you going to jerk the rug right out from underneath it, or are you going to let it expire in 2022 like it should, and then stand on its own?” […]

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.): “Maggie, you rightly noted that the RFS is set to expire in 2022. When I said we should phase it out, I said it should be a five-year phase-out — a phase-out from 2017 to 2022 is five years.”

—exchange during a campaign event in Cherokee, Iowa, Jan. 6, 2016

Voters in corn-growing Iowa have confronted Cruz about his stance against the federal renewable-fuel mandate, which sets the minimum amount of corn-based ethanol to be mixed into gasoline to reduce or replace the amount of fossil fuel.

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Energy Bill Faces Tough Hurdles As Prices Fall During Election Year

By Gary Truitt, Hoosier Ag Today.

The Senate GOP leadership calls the energy bill that the Energy Committee passed with a bipartisan 18-4 vote last July “a leading contender” for floor debate early this year. Energy Committee Chair Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, is eager to lead that debate, hoping for Senate passage by March. If the Senate passes the Murkowski/Cantwell Energy Policy Modernization Act, S. 2012, the next step will be a House/Senate conference to merge that bill with the North American Energy Security and Infrastructure Act, H.R. 8, which the House passed Dec. 3 in a 249-174 vote.

But prospects for finalizing an energy bill this year face four major hurdles:

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Congress may pass bipartisan energy bill this year, key senator predicts

By Erin Kelly, USA Today.

BALTIMORE — Congress could send a sweeping energy bill to President Obama's desk with bipartisan support this year, the chairman of the Senate Republican Policy Committee predicted Thursday at a GOP congressional retreat.

Although few major bills are expected to clear the Senate in this election year, Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wy., said he believes the energy bill can pass the divided chamber with strong support from senators of both parties. The Senate has 54 Republicans, 44 Democrats and two independents.

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