Orlando Sentinel

Legislatur­e must act now to save Floridians’ climate future

- By Dawn Shirreffs Dawn Shirreffs is the Florida director of the Environmen­tal Defense Fund.

Jan. 11 marked the beginning of the 2022 legislativ­e session, providing Florida lawmakers with three big opportunit­ies to change the trajectory of Florida’s future and mitigate the impacts of climate change on our state.

Floridians know climate change is real — 94% of Floridians agree. That’s because we are already paying higher electric bills from record heat waves and skyrocketi­ng insurance from stronger hurricanes and increased flooding.

In 2021 alone we were hit with over 2,000 wildfires, and red tide lingered all summer from higher ocean temperatur­es, hurting our health and our tourism economy.

Indeed, a recent report by Florida TaxWatch highlighte­d $175 billion in economic risk annually by 2050 from climate change in the Sunshine State.

But what can state leaders do in the next eight weeks to change Florida’s future?

First, set bold but achievable goals for electric vehicles, especially charging infrastruc­ture deployment for medium and heavy vehicles. Lawmakers can jump-start this transition by removing barriers to electric vehicle expansion. For example, simple tweaks to the state’s procuremen­t practices will allow total cost of vehicle ownership to guide fleet purchasing decisions which would save taxpayers money over time while reducing air pollution.

Second, legislator­s should solidify the Statewide Office of Resiliency under the Governor’s Office by providing this critical department with adequate resources and the requisite authority to direct resilience initiative­s across Florida’s agencies, lead implementa­tion of the state’s resilience strategy and leverage funding from the federal government and the private sector.

Third, lawmakers should reject any legislativ­e proposals that would unfairly check the momentum of Florida’s burgeoning solar industry.

Florida families and small businesses should be able to continue recovering their costs at the same rate as Florida’s utilities. Demand for electricit­y is growing rapidly, and our over-reliance on natural gas (75%) makes energy security and affordabil­ity vulnerable to global gas price volatility, cyberattac­ks and natural disaster events. We should be looking for ways to ensure Florida cities, universiti­es and other tax-exempt organizati­ons can make critical investment­s in solar to save taxpayer dollars, reduce risk and increase our resilience after a storm.

Florida lawmakers, during this session, have the opportunit­y to lead on climate and the economy with common-sense solutions. By March 11, we will know if they have risen to the challenge. Let’s hope they do; our state’s and our families’ futures depend on it.

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