U.S. Energy Research and Development Policy: Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Energy of the Committee on Science, Space, and Technology, House of Representatives, One Hundred Second Congress, First Session, July 11, 16, 25; August 1, 1991

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471. lappuse - LIHEAP reductions, much less additional reductions, even if they legally could be used to supplement federal and state resources; now, therefore, be it RESOLVED, That the Executive Committee of the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC), assembled at its 1990...
248. lappuse - US energypolicy of volatile oil prices, emphasizing the effects of low prices on domestic oil production, eg, plugging of stripper wells and loss of production from tertiary and some secondary recovery operations in the shorter term, loss of production and reserves due to lower drilling rates, reduced R&D expenditures, and so forth in the longer term. In the second phase aimed at overall US energy supply and demand...
471. lappuse - Resolution in Support of Federal Research on Energy Conservation WHEREAS, An energy policy that provides a balanced reliance on supplies and demand is essential to the Nation's future well being and security; and WHEREAS, The current worldwide oil surplus and resulting lower oil prices are providing a misleading signal that the energy crisis has passed; and WHEREAS, The ability of the Nation to adjust to future energy supply constraints will depend on the development of new energy efficient products...
453. lappuse - ... with this situation, and if between now and the next annual meeting it is the opinion of the executive committee that the time has arrived when it would be practicable for the employment services to be returned to the States, that the executive committee is hereby authorized and directed to so notify the President of the United States ; be it further Resolved, That the governors direct their employment security administrators to make such plans as are necessary for resuming control of employment...
249. lappuse - Next, the study will describe current forecasts for the next 15 to 25 years and identify their underlying assumptions. The study will then identify and evaluate the primary sources of technical uncertainties in the forecasts. The sources of technical uncertainty include: economic growth rates and patterns; new energy supply, conservation, and end use technologies; geologic uncertainties about available oil and gas resources; consumer reactions to lower energy prices, and other aspects of public and...
80. lappuse - ... in the mix. Also, it is important to prepare for the possibility that greenhouse warming may become far more serious in the future. Alternative energy technologies are unable currently or in the near future to replace fossil fuels as the major electricity source for this country. If fossil fuels had to be replaced now as the primary source of electricity, nuclear power appears to be the most technically feasible alternative. But nuclear reactor designs capable of meeting fail-safe criteria and...
473. lappuse - February 27, 1991, and other national organizations, including the American Public Power Association, the Edison Electric Institute, the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, the Large Public Power Council, the Consumer Federation of America, and the National Conference of State Legislatures...
515. lappuse - Rayburn House Office Building, Hon. Marilyn Lloyd (Chairman of the Subcommittee) presiding. OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. MARILYN LLOYD, CHAIRMAN, SUBCOMMITTEE ON ENERGY RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT Mrs.
472. lappuse - FPA's jurisdictional allocation of authority is no longer consistent with the manner in which the industry now operates; now, therefore, be it RESOLVED, That the Executive Committee of the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC), convened at its Winter Meeting in Washington, DC...
240. lappuse - A strategy to limit oil import dependence and vulnerability might involve goals to (1) limit overall oil imports, perhaps to 50% of total US oil use and (2) diversify sources of world oil production and therefore US sources of imports to regions of the world outside the Middle East where such imports can be aligned with other US policy interests. Other than noting that the potential for improved production in the Soviet Union, Asia, and South America is great, I shall not address the latter goal...

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