Republican US presidential candidate Jeb Bush was due to lay out his energy policy proposals yesterday that seek to spur job growth and take aim at US President Barack Obama’s plan to limit carbon emissions from power plants.
In a speech at Rice Energy Inc in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, Bush was to give yet another detailed policy speech on what he would try to accomplish if elected president in November next year.
It is part of an extended campaign approach by the former Florida governor to present himself as a conservative policy heavyweight as he attempts to make up ground on Donald Trump, who has been leading in opinion polls ahead of the Republican presidential nomination.
In details of his plan released by his campaign, Bush will call for the lifting of a US ban on crude oil exports and lift restrictions on natural gas exports that have made it harder to export energy to nations such as Japan, China and those in the EU.
Lifting the ban, Bush said in a Medium post published yesterday, would create “hundreds of thousands of additional jobs and significantly lower net energy costs within two years.”
Bush was to vow to fight Obama’s plan, released last month, that would force US power plants to reduce carbon emissions as part of an effort to attack climate change.
The White House plan would order power plants to cut carbon emissions 32 percent from 2005 levels by 2030. The aim is to encourage an aggressive shift toward renewable energy and away from coal-fired electricity, pushing utilities to invest even more heavily in wind and solar energy.
Industry groups and some lawmakers from states that have relied on coal-based energy have vowed to challenge the new requirements in the courts and through Congress.
Bush said in his post that the Obama plan “needs to be stopped in its tracks” and that any federal rules that would suppress domestic energy production and raise energy prices should be addressed by the next president.
Bush was also due to vow to approve the Keystone Xl pipeline, the Canada-to-Texas pipeline that the Obama administration has been reviewing for years without approving it.
Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton, who is seeking her party’s nomination for president, has said she opposes the pipeline.
Bush has vowed to pursue policies that would lead to 4 percent annual economic growth and his energy plan is part of that platform.
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