Senate Proposal Signals Positive Movement Toward
Comprehensive Climate Legislation
10/23/2007
Washington, DC - Climate change legislation introduced recently by Senators
Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) and John Warner (R-Va.) sends a strong signal that
the U.S. is moving toward reducing its greenhouse gas emissions.
With a nod to earlier legislative proposals, the Lieberman-Warner bill has
adopted provisions from other bills and expanded to cover more of the U.S.
economy. The bill also represents a significant step toward domestic
policies that will be required for effective global action against the
greatest consequences of climate change.
The bill’s proposed mandatory, economy-wide greenhouse gas reductions come
as the international community prepares for a new round of climate change
negotiations this December in Bali, Indonesia. It is widely understood that
without U.S. action on the issue in the next several years, a successful
international agreement on climate change will be difficult, if not
impossible, to achieve by 2012.
“The U.S. Congress urgently needs to review and pass climate policy to
unleash innovation and transition to a low-carbon future,” said Jonathan
Lash, president of the World Resources Institute (WRI). “The international
community understands the importance of U.S. action and they will take note
of this and other developments in Congress.”
The latest refinements to the Lieberman-Warner bill outline a cap-and-trade
strategy to reduce emissions from covered sectors by 15 percent by 2020 and
70 percent by 2050. In doing so, it establishes useful rules for investors
and businesses, many of whom have been seeking clear, long-term U.S. goals
to guide their decisions domestically and internationally.
In addition, the bill has incorporated components of several other bills and
proposals including agricultural sequestration of carbon, improved building
codes, and carbon capture and storage. Additional policies such as
automobile efficiency, renewable energy standards and energy efficiency,
currently passed by the House and Senate in the energy bill, may also
complement a cap-and-trade program, an approach long sought by leaders such
as Senators Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.) and Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) as they scoped
their legislative proposal earlier this year.
SOURCE: Climate change legislation
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