Dow CEO calls for comprehensive U.S. energy policy

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Dow Chemical Co has called on the incoming administration of U.S. President-elect Barack Obama and Congress to implement a comprehensive national energy policy. "I will guarantee you that I am not going to drop my voice one iota until we get an energy policy in this country that makes sense," Chief Executive Andrew Liveris told Reuters in an interview on Friday.

Dow Chemical Co has called on the incoming administration of U.S. President-elect Barack Obama and Congress to implement a comprehensive national energy policy.

"I will guarantee you that I am not going to drop my voice one iota until we get an energy policy in this country that makes sense," Chief Executive Andrew Liveris told Reuters in an interview on Friday.

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Liveris has repeatedly criticized Washington lawmakers in the past for failing to implement a U.S. energy policy that encourages energy efficiency, speeds the development of renewable energy technology and spurs domestic domestic oil and gas production.

"No one's head-faked by $2 (a gallon) gasoline, everyone realizes that $2 gasoline is here for the wrong reasons," he said.

Dow released a set of proposals on Thursday titled "Dow's Energy Plan for America," and called for a bipartisan national energy policy that will help stabilize energy prices and strengthen the U.S. economy.

The Midland, Michigan-based company said volatile natural gas prices over the past two decades have resulted in a net loss of 120,000 chemical industry jobs.

Moreover, the U.S. chemical industry has gone from a $19 billion trade surplus to becoming a net importer of chemicals in the last 10 years.

Liveris said Dow has been working on the energy plan for a couple of years and believed that, with the impending change in U.S. administration, it was time to get the plan out.

Soaring crude oil and natural gas prices were a major issue in the first half of 2008, but the credit crisis and a looming global recession have hammered energy prices and moved the energy issue away from the limelight.

High energy costs hurt Dow's results in the first half of 2008, as the company uses crude oil and natural gas as key raw materials to produce a wide range of chemicals.

Some media reports have recently mentioned Liveris as a possible candidate for U.S. energy secretary in an Obama administration.

Liveris declined to comment on whether he has been approached, and said he remains firmly entrenched in Dow.

"While it is certainly an honor for me to be mentioned in some reports about this incredibly important leadership role, my focus is on leading the Dow Chemical Company," he said in a prior statement.

(Editing by Matthew Lewis)