Wasden plans energy conference
Energy
experts to meet state attorneys generalBetsy Z. Russell Spokesman-Review June 29, 2007
Boise
– From global warming to alternative energy sources to increasing gas prices,
states are facing serious energy issues, and state attorneys general need to be
prepared, Idaho Attorney General Lawrence Wasden
says.
Newly
elected as president of the National Association of Attorneys General, Wasden has selected energy as the initiative he'll focus on
during his one-year term. He'll organize a two-day conference next spring for
all state attorneys general, inviting experts from government, private industry
and the scientific community to discuss energy issues and their implications,
legal and otherwise.
"This is an
issue that's really ripe for discussion and will impact hugely what's going to
occur in our future," Wasden said in an interview.
"What we need to do as attorneys general is get on the same page, we need to
understand what the facts are in order for us to properly advise our clients who
are going to have to solve those policy questions."
The Idaho
Legislature this year adopted its first energy policy in 25 years, but critics
complained that it lacked teeth and didn't fully commit the state to shifting to
renewable energy sources.
Wasden said state attorneys general
don't make policy – but they provide the legal background and consultation to
those who do. "It's not in any way believing that attorneys general can be the
sole solution to the country's and the state's energy needs – that isn't the
role we play. But as an adviser to those people who will make those policy
choices, we need to be informed to help them make their choice," he
said.
Wasden, a Republican, is a
second-term Idaho attorney general
who worked as a top deputy in the office for years before he was elected to the
post. He succeeds Georgia Attorney General Thurbert
Baker as president of the national association.
Baker
focused on public-private partnerships as his initiative during his presidency.
Past association presidents have targeted public corruption, pharmaceutical
industry pricing and practices, and end-of-life issues.
"There's been quite a variety of projects," Wasden said.
He noted
that Idaho has been
seeing proposals for increased nuclear energy production, wind farms, biodiesel
production and more. "This project is more than just global warming," he said.
Asked his personal view on global warming, Wasden
said, "I can't say that I am a particular expert on this." He said he and other
attorneys general need "a full grasp of what it means, and what its implications
are."
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