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Lisa Murkowski on Energy & Oil

Republican Jr Senator (AK)


Need a president who will sign ANWR

MURKOWSKI: "The key is that we have a president who will sign ANWR this time," Murkowski said. "It's so important not to have John Kerry in office."

KNOWLES: Knowles, who also supports drilling in the refuge, said Republicans have failed because they have not reached across party lines--something he has promised to do throughout his campaign. "We can make great progress," he said.

Source: AK Senate Debate in Fairbanks Daily News-Miner Oct 29, 2004

Support fiscal incentives for the natural gas pipeline

Murkowski attacked Knowles for saying he wouldn't support a bill that included fiscal incentives for the natural gas pipeline, while Knowles berated Murkowski for not including provisions that would have forced Exxon Mobil to pay punitive damages to Alaskans for the 1989 oil spill.
Source: AK Senate Debate, Anchorage Daily News Oct 27, 2004

Get ANWR with a Republican-led majority

MURKOWSKI: "We needed two votes in the last go-'round [of the ANWR vote]. With a Republican-led majority, you get it on the agenda. We pick up these seats. We have George Bush in office. And we get ANWR next year. That's the strategy."

KNOWLES: Instead of trying to push a "partisan, secret, pork-filled bill that's now lying dead on the floor of Congress," an Alaska senator needs to seek ANWR through a bill that also sets tougher mileage standards for cars and requires power plants to use a certain percentage of renewable fuels, he said. "That's the balance that I believe is going to bring about the development of ANWR and the gas line," he said.

Source: AK Senate Debate, in Fairbanks Daily News-Miner Oct 20, 2004

Incentives for an Alaskan natural gas pipeline

As part of a Senate energy bill, Murkowski won money for job training, approval for an $18 billion loan guarantee and two tax incentives to reduce pipeline and gas conditioning plant costs. The job training provision alone provides $20 million for Alaska, including $3 million to construct a facility in Fairbanks to house and train pipeline workers.
Source: Campaign website, LisaMurkowski.com Jun 30, 2004

Establish an Arctic engineering research center

Murkowski won Senate approval of $3 million a year for five years for an Arctic Engineering Center at the University of Alaska Fairbanks to study the effects of climate change in the Arctic and to develop ways to better build roads, buildings and other infrastructure to meet these changes.
Source: Campaign website, LisaMurkowski.com Jun 30, 2004

Reopening the Healy Clean Coal Plant

Murkowski won Senate approval for a $125 million low-cost federal loan to help retrofit and reopen the Healy Clean Coal Plant to generate power for the Fairbanks area and the Railbelt and to provide needed jobs in Alaska's coal mines.
Source: Campaign website, LisaMurkowski.com Jun 30, 2004

Voted NO on tax incentives for energy production and conservation.

OnTheIssues.org Explanation:A "Cloture Motion" would end debate on the bill, and then allow a vote on passage. This motion failed (3/5ths of the Senators must vote YEA), based on objections of how the new incentives would be paid for.Congressional Summary:A bill to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to provide Tax incentives for energy production and conservation, to extend certain expiring provisions, and to provide individual income tax relief.