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WASHINGTON, DC -- An advisory panel of state energy officials has weighed in on the nation's homeland security, including energy security, with a report that answers the question "how do we make our energy infrastructure more resilient and less vulnerable?"
"Although the events of September 11 were not directed at the nation's energy sector, it forced many of us to begin taking stock of just how vulnerable our energy infrastructure is," said Maurice Kaya, chairman of the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) State Energy Advisory Board (STEAB). "It also forced us to begin thinking about how energy fits into a secure homeland.'
An important note sounded in the STEAB report is the role that energy efficiency and renewable ...