Quote:
Originally Posted by spence
Let's take the Brayton Point power plant as an example. The Government passes tighter environmental regulations, and instead of upgrading the plant to emit less methyl mercury, they just keep the plant going "as-is" and pay the fines which are next to nothing.
The costs are then never really passed on to the consumer in the form of higher energy prices.
It is passed onto my son via the quality of air he breathes and in the fish he eats.
Scam my ass, open your mind.-spence
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Then raise the fines and give them an grace period where they can reuse the fine $$ to improve the plant.
Actually the fines are paid by the consumer also.
I'm open to anything that works.
In the budget he is charging carbon credits which will raise the rates and then giving a large portion of that money to people that can't afford the higher cost. How's that going to help your son breath better?
Incentives work. I see it every day and I would be willing to bet you and everyone on here has mailed in a rebate on an Energy Star product or used the tax rebate to get a new, more efficient furnace for there home. See, it's working already.