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time.com > These divisions are setting up a surprising,high-stakes fight. Tudor’s coalition,the Houston Energy Transition Initiative (HETI),is organized by the city’s most prominent business group,,its members are putting serious cash behind new energy efforts. But some politicians are pushing back,launching efforts to slow renewable energy,publicly vilifying environment initiatives. “[Major oil,gas firms] may have supported us in the past,but they certainly don’t align us now,” says Jason Isaac of the conservative Texas Public Policy Foundation. “They’re going to go,chase money—and it’s unfortunate.” time.com > These divisions are setting up a surprising,high-stakes fight. Tudor’s coalition,the Houston Energy Transition Initiative (HETI),is organized by the city’s most prominent business group,,its members are putting serious cash behind new energy efforts. But some politicians are pushing back,launching efforts to slow renewable energy,publicly vilifying environment initiatives. “[Major oil,gas firms] may have supported us in the past,but they certainly don’t align us now,” says Jason Isaac of the conservative Texas Public Policy Foundation. “They’re going to go,chase money—and it’s unfortunate.”
time.com > These divisions are setting up a surprising,high-stakes fight. Tudor’s coalition,the Houston Energy Transition Initiative (HETI),is organized by the city’s most prominent business group,,its members are putting serious cash behind new energy efforts. But some politicians are pushing back,launching efforts to slow renewable energy,publicly vilifying environment initiatives. “[Major oil,gas firms] may have supported us in the past,but they certainly don’t align us now,” says Jason Isaac of the conservative Texas Public Policy Foundation. “They’re going to go,chase money—and it’s unfortunate.” time.com > These divisions are setting up a surprising,high-stakes fight. Tudor’s coalition,the Houston Energy Transition Initiative (HETI),is organized by the city’s most prominent business group,,its members are putting serious cash behind new energy efforts. But some politicians are pushing back,launching efforts to slow renewable energy,publicly vilifying environment initiatives. “[Major oil,gas firms] may have supported us in the past,but they certainly don’t align us now,” says Jason Isaac of the conservative Texas Public Policy Foundation. “They’re going to go,chase money—and it’s unfortunate.”
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