What's Happening



Roscommon/Crawford Chapter



What’s Happening 


Regular readers of this blog will remember that Citizens Climate Lobby has developed and supported a proposal to mitigate climate change by enacting a national tax on fossil fuels. Some people refer to the idea of taxing fossil fuels as a carbon tax, although the formal name for Ccl’s proposal is Energy Innovation and Carbon Dividend Act. The idea was first introduced in the US House of Representatives and is now known as House Bill 763 as it awaits action from the full House and Senate. Although the bill is widely lauded, action by both the House and Senate has been slow in coming since many believe the administration would surely veto the proposal if it were passed by Congress.

What’s happening now is that our politicians are finally beginning to come to their senses in considering solutions for climate change. It seems that nearly everyone in both the House and Senate, regardless of political party, concurs that action must be taken soon. That is, everyone except the current administration, those who rejected our participation in the Paris Accords agreement despite the US being one of its leading proponents during the Obama years. Even comedians are ridiculing the official posture of the United States in this regard.

"U.N. experts are saying that climate change could start threatening the world's supply of fruits and vegetables. Then Americans said, 'OK, let us know when it starts affecting Twinkies and Hot Pockets.” –Jimmy Fallon

Forbes Magazine now reports “the relevant question in America today is not whether a carbon price will be enacted, but when.” Forbes rounds out their report with a striking ending: “A future that does not include a price on carbon is no future at all.”

There are eight carbon pricing proposals in circulation in the current, 116th Congress. Four of the proposals have Republican sponsors. Most have one or two sponsors while the Ccl bill on carbon tax has 79 sponsors from both parties. If you would like more details, the following web page provides a concise summary of the eight proposals:

The idea of taxing carbon emissions seems fundamental to all the new proposals for change. Even major oil companies seem resigned to the fact of an impending carbon tax.
On June 15, the chief executive of British Petroleum (BP) more than doubled BP’s carbon tax forecast to $100 [per ton] for the year 2030. The forecast reflects BP’s view that the world will transition away from oil, coal and gas toward cleaner alternatives by the end of the decade. BP also announced that it would write off up to $10 billion in untapped oil reserves, an acknowledgement that the world’s hunger for fossil fuels will fall precipitously.

House Democrats recently announced an action plan to build a clean energy economy, with a price on carbon serving “to internalize the cost of climate change in energy prices.” This, after a recent poll showed an overwhelming majority of Americans are in favor of a corporate tax on carbon emissions.
One of the newest proposals for climate change was introduced in the Senate by our own Senator Debbie Stabenow, the Growing Climate Solutions Act.
Ms. Stabenow introduces a new bill 


This climate change proposal focuses exclusively on farming practices that can reduce CO2 emissions. This proposal is also a bipartisan effort that has been presented to the Senate’s Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry Committee. A House version of the bill was just introduced also with bipartisan sponsors foreshadowing a possible vote on the issue after the fall elections and a likely change in leadership.

If you would like more information about this proposal, here is a link that provides some details concerning the proposal and its current status:

Ccl is among the organizations supporting the Growing Climate Solutions Act as it appears to dovetail nicely with Ccl’s Energy Innovation and Carbon Dividend Act. The combined effect of both bills would go a long way toward cleaning up our atmosphere and correcting the problems we face with climate change.

I don’t know about you, but I am getting tired of our recent heat wave. The fix for climate change is way overdue and can’t come soon enough to suit me. If you feel inclined, you might want to tell Debbie thanks and urge her to go forward as fast as possible.


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