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Clean Energy Act
replicates Telecommunication Act of 1996
Like the Telecommunication Act of 1996, the Clean Energy Act deregulates clean energy generation, storage, and distribution markets to competition and remove regulatory barriers to entry in order to achieve lower prices, improve the quality of energy services. To encourage rapid deployment of the new clean energy technologies by the private sector. Federal, state, and local taxes are eliminated.
Clean Power Plants are located where the demand of electricity is need, which minimizes the need for additional transmission lines. The power plants are initially built on refurbished Coal power plants sites. An estimated four hundred sites are available.
Intelligent Grid replaces the Smart Grid because the electric demand is flat. In addition to the SCADA (supervisory control and data acquisition), micro-grids optimize building’s energy usage.
Electric Vehicles: One hundred clean power plants generate 1 trillion kilowatt hours of electricity for hundreds of million electric vehicles. After spending years developing electric vehicles, Tesla Motors is selling electric vehicles that can travel over 300 miles without recharging. Other automobile manufactures are following Tesla Motors lead. Electric vehicle are charged in the evening at people’s homes during off peak, which will level the demand for electricity.
Interconnectedness. One of the provisions of the Energy Act is to allow incumbent carriers and new entrants to interconnect their networks with one another, imposing additional requirements on the incumbents because they might desire to restrict competitive entry by denying such interconnection or by setting terms, conditions, and rates that could undermine the ability of the new entrants to compete]
Wholesale access to the Power Grid. To allow new entrants enough time to fully build out their transmission and distribution lines, the Act requires the incumbent local exchange carriers to make available to entrants, at cost-based wholesale rates, those elements of their network to which entrants needed access in order not to be impaired in their ability to offer telecommunications services.
Universal service support. The proposed act requiring universal service support to be explicit, rather than hidden in above-cost rates.
If our leaders are successful, wars and military conflicts over energy, natural resources, and culture values along with pestilence and famine, which have plagued humanity for thousands of years, are eradicated.
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