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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Edwards defends huge new house

Mike Glover Associated Press

NEVADA, Iowa – Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards on Tuesday defended the construction of a sprawling, 28,000-square-foot house in North Carolina, arguing that his home is a model of energy efficiency.

“The house was built from the beginning, both in its location for passive solar and the use of active solar, to help provide some of the energy for the house,” Edwards said in an interview. “It doesn’t provide all of the energy, but it provides some.”

Sitting on 102 secluded acres, the 28,000-square-foot estate that Edwards and his family call home has a main house with five bedrooms and six-and-a-half baths. It’s connected by a covered walkway to a bright red addition known as “The Barn,” which includes its own living facilities along with a handball court, an indoor pool and an indoor basketball court with a stage at one end.

Edwards said he hired a design expert during construction to offer energy efficiency options and his family has taken efficiency to the smallest detail.

Edwards argued that his house meets top federal efficiency standards because of the careful planning.

“It’s the reason we got this five-star energy rating, which is a federal standard,” he said. He declined to discuss his monthly bill.

Edwards was in Iowa to tour a biomass energy conversion area where researchers are devising ways of producing energy from renewable sources. He used the tour as a backdrop to spell out his plan for dealing with the international emergency of global warming, rejecting suggestions that steps such as capping greenhouse gas emissions would dampen the economy. Instead, he argued, facilities like the one he toured can spark a new, energy-driven economy.

On energy, Edwards said he would:

“Cap greenhouse gas emissions beginning in 2010, cutting them by 15 percent by 2020.

“Push for a new treaty to include developing nations. “The issue of global warming is a serious crisis for the world. We are near the tipping point,” he said.

“Create a new energy fund by selling $10 billion in greenhouse pollution permits and end $3 billion in subsidies for big oil companies. He would also set a goal of raising fuel efficiency standards to 40 miles per gallon.

“Set a goal of freezing electrical demand over the next decade and producing 25 percent of the nation’s electricity from renewable sources.