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On environment, Obama likely to keep walking middle line

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The administration has yet to reveal specifics regarding a second-term energy and environment agenda and declined to discuss it, focusing for the moment on a deal with Congress to avert the “fiscal cliff.”

At a Nov. 14 news conference, Obama said of climate change: “We have not done as much as we need to. You can expect that you will hear more from me in the coming months and years about how we can shape an agenda that garners bipartisan support and helps move this agenda forward.”

But the president went on to say that one approach many environmentalists hope to see, a tax on emissions of carbon dioxide, is off the table so far.

The question is how many months and years elapse before that climate agenda emerges. Fiscal and immigration reforms are among Obama’s top priorities. Environmentalists said they would like for him to talk about climate change as often as he does about tax reform.

“We want to see him use the bully pulpit of the presidency to elevate the issue,” said Gene Karpinski, president of the League of Conservation Voters.

For its part, the House Energy and Commerce Committee vowed to challenge any new rules curtailing pollutants including carbon dioxide, the main driver of climate change.

“Republicans will continue to support a true ‘all-of-the-above’ energy strategy that lets all sources of American energy compete,” said chairman of the Energy and Power Subcommittee, Rep. Edward Whitfield, R-Ky. “This means stopping regulatory policies that unfairly punish affordable energy sources.”

Industry and environmentalists say decisions the administration will issue over the next few months could be indicators of what to expect over the next four years.

Reductions in greenhouse gas emissions could be set into motion in early 2013 when the EPA is expected to finalize limits on carbon dioxide emissions from new power plants, a step analysts contend will accelerate the existing trend of phasing out coal-fired boilers. The next step would be to address carbon from existing plants, a much tougher fight.

By Wednesday, the EPA is set to issue its final rules on soot, fine particles emitted by power plants and diesel vehicles that contribute to haze and respiratory ailments. The stringency of the final standard could signal the level of EPA’s regulatory aggressiveness.

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