Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper has appointed three people to the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission (OGCC), which oversees energy resources. Appointed were Ashley Lowe Ager of Durango, a soil conservation/reclamation professional; Kent Jolley of Glenwood Springs, a royalty owner and rancher; and Winston Perry Pearce of Denver, a petroleum/geology engineer with industry experience.
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Environmentalists Challenge New Mexico Climate Law Rollback
New Mexico Environmental Law Center attorneys have gone to the state’s appeals court seeking to overturn a decision by appointees of Gov. Susana Martinez to roll back a climate change law opposed by the oil/gas industry. The law was passed two years ago in a Democratic administration before Martinez, a Republican, took office.
Schwarzenegger Names Five-Member ‘Energy Team’
Spreading appointees throughout the state’s existing energy structure, California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger Tuesday named a five-member “energy team,” providing regulatory, high-tech, energy efficiency, political and consulting experience.
Schwarzenegger Names Five-Member ‘Energy Team’
Spreading appointees throughout the state’s existing energy structure, California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger Tuesday named a five-member “energy team,” providing regulatory, high-tech, energy efficiency, political and consulting experience.
CPUC Commissioner Bilas Resigns, Cites Health, Policy Changes
One of two remaining minority Republican appointees and a former two-time president of California’s regulatory commission, Richard Bilas announced Wednesday he is resigning from the California Public Utilities Commission effective March 8. In a letter to Gov. Gray Davis, Bilas, a Ph.D. free-market economist and former university professor, curtly referred to being “most frustrated by the policy changes at the Commission.”
CPUC Commissioner Bilas Resigns, Cites Health, Policy Changes
One of two remaining minority Republican appointees and a former two-time president of California’s regulatory commission, Richard Bilas announced Wednesday he is resigning from the California Public Utilities Commission effective March 8. In a letter to Gov. Gray Davis, Bilas, a Ph.D. free-market economist and former university professor, curtly referred to being “most frustrated by the policy changes at the Commission.”
CPUC Tries to Save Gas Restructuring
California energy regulators, all appointees of outgoing Gov.Pete Wilson, last week requested a meeting after Labor Day with thegovernor in an attempt to head off new state legislation that couldfurther hinder ongoing attempts to streamline regulation and injectmore competition into the natural gas industry. The president ofthe California Public Utilities Commission calls one of the bills”truly anti-competitive.”