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U.S. CITIES:
Most Americans Getting Whacked by High Energy Costs
Paul Bedard
High Energy Costs for the Poor Might Push Action in Congress
A new study from a key energy coalition finds that poorer Americans are spending a huge amount of their income on energy, a finding the group hopes will spark renewed attention on
"As we continue to rebuild our economy and help those who are having the hardest time making ends meet, policies that ensure access to affordable, reliable electricity should be a high priority," says
Energy industry officials believe that the only way to kick-start
Here's the release from the coalition:
Energy Costs Hurting Already Strained Family Budgets
The annual assessment based upon data from the
"Energy costs are still eating away at family budgets," said
According to ACCCE, the survey's findings are particularly timely. Both federal and state policy makers are debating energy and environmental proposals, some of which could significantly raise energy prices.
"Meeting America's demand for affordable, reliable, and clean energy will require the prudent use of all of our available domestic energy resources, especially coal," said Lucas. "Now, and as we bring new technologies to the marketplace to reduce carbon emissions, coal will remain a good value for the American consumer. Generating electricity from coal will provide our nation with continued access to affordable, reliable, and increasingly clean energy using a resource that is found and creates jobs right here at home."
The following are just a few of the key findings discovered by
-- Energy costs are taking up a large percentage of household incomes. Approximately one-half of U.S. households have average pre-tax annual incomes of less than
-- Lower-income families are more vulnerable to energy cost increases than higher-income families because energy represents a larger portion of their household budgets. Families earning less than
-- Household expenditures for gasoline have more than doubled in the past decade. In 2001, the average household spent an average of
-- Among consumer energy products, electricity has maintained relatively low annual rates of price increase since 2001. Coal-based generation provides about one-half of America's electricity supply and has contributed to the holding down electricity prices.
The study relies on historical energy consumption survey data and current energy price forecasts from the
A complete copy of the study can be found on www.americaspower.org.
About ACCCE -
About the researcher -
Available at Amazon.com:
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Most Americans Getting Whacked by High Energy Costs | Paul Bedard
(c) 2010 U.S. News & World Report
