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Republicans to propose more oil drilling, no greenhouse-gas control

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“The series of extreme weather events that have swept across the nation in the last year have made it abundantly clear there is no time to waste in tackling our carbon problem around the nation and globe,” Matzner said.

The Democrats control the Senate, and Murkowski will need to work with them to get her priorities into law. She said her plan is a starting point.

The energy committee chairman, Oregon Democrat Ron Wyden, received a copy of the proposal Friday and said he had to take a closer look before weighing in on it.

“Senator Wyden is looking forward to working with Senator Murkowski on legislation when the time comes, and to taking her plan’s recommendations into account as much as possible,” said Wyden spokesman, Keith Chu.

Wyden and Murkowski are already working together on the possibility of giving states such as Alaska a share of the federal money from energy production off their coasts. Murkowski is pushing for up to 37.5 percent.

Murkowski wants oil leasing off the coasts of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia. She wants an increase in drilling on federal lands, saying that will hasten independence from imported oil.

Her proposals include drilling in the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and overturning the Interior Department’s plan to set aside half the National Petroleum-Reserve Alaska for wildlife, wilderness and recreation. Murkowski also wants to speed approval for resource production on Alaska Native lands.

Murkowski is resistant to federal regulation of fracking, the controversial process in which high-pressure water and chemicals are injected underground to free the natural gas inside shale rock. Murkowski said the states already do a good job of regulating it.

She is pushing for immediate approval of the Keystone XL Pipeline, which is opposed by environmental groups because it would tap Canadian oil sands that are higher in carbon emissions than other sources of oil.

Pursuit of energy efficiency is important but shouldn’t hurt the standard of living, according to Murkowski’s blueprint, which argues it’s misguided to think lower consumption necessarily makes the nation more efficient.

“A household that cuts its usage of gasoline is certainly conserving energy, but if the members of that household are spending more time taking alternative travel, or simply taking fewer trips, then they also may be accomplishing less in their lives. Americans are and should be free to pursue happiness, after all,” Murkowski’s proposal says.

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