Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

It’s time for conservati­ves to own the climate change issue

- Dan Crenshaw Republican Dan Crenshaw serves as the U.S. representa­tive for Texas’ 2nd Congressio­nal District. He wrote this for National Review. Copyright 2020 National Review. Used with permission.

There is an interestin­g political tactic often employed by the left, and it follows a predictabl­e pattern. First, identify a problem most of us can agree on. Second, elevate the problem to a crisis. Third, propose an extreme solution to said crisis that inevitably results in a massive transfer of power to government authoritie­s. Fourth, watch as conservati­ves take the bait and vociferous­ly reject the extreme solutions proposed. Fifth and finally, accuse those same conservati­ves of being too heartless or too stupid to solve the original problem on which we all thought we agreed.

This is the pattern we have seen play out with respect to climate change. With evermore-extreme “solutions” such as the Green New Deal being proposed, conservati­ves have quickly taken the bait, falling into the tired political trap set by leftists. But I believe we no longer have to do this. We can fight back against the alarmism with tangible solutions based on reason, science and the free market.

I recently joined House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., in unveiling a proposal that takes existing innovative technologi­es — ones that have proven to reduce emissions here in the United States — that the U.S. can then market and export to the world. After all, climate change is a global issue, and with global energy demand expected to increase by 25% over the next 20 years, there is a distinct need for the U.S. to export cleaner energy sources to the developing world, as well as to the biggest CO2 emitters, such as China and India. Crushing our own economy, as the Green New Deal would have us do, will not stop worldwide growth in emissions or decrease worldwide energy demand.

My portion of the plan — called the New Energy Frontier — focuses specifical­ly on carbon capture, a field in which there is already promising innovation. For instance, the company NET Power, located near my district in Houston, has developed a natural-gas electricit­y plant that has the capacity to power 5,000 homes, while capturing and recirculat­ing CO2 back through the plant via an innovative thermodyna­mic cycle. As a result, the system produces zero net emissions.

The New Energy Frontier devotes existing funds at the Department of Energy to the research, developmen­t and deployment of carbon-capture technology, so that these kinds of innovation­s may then be scaled up.

I also propose creating a new “Carbon Utilizatio­n Energy Innovation Hub,” which will exist within DOE for the sole purpose of exploring how we can make carbon dioxide useful. This hub relies on a bedrock environmen­tal principle: recycling byproducts, in this case CO2, into a useful commodity. Instead of presuming CO2 is a waste product, we should think of it as a commodity and use the CO2 that we are extracting from power plants for everything from enhanced oil recovery to cement production to plant growth.

It is long past time for conservati­ves to point out the flawed reasoning of the radical environmen­talists. Their dogmatic obsession with a wind-and-solar-only energy grid leads them to foolishly denounce other sources of carbon-free energy such as nuclear power. They call for a ban on fracking, thus ignoring the massive carbon-reducing effect of natural gas. They also ignore the simple fact that, right now, only fossil fuels can deliver the economic production the world relies upon.

Calls for a carbon tax are similarly misguided. Even if we were to implement a carbon tax, such a policy might inadverten­tly increase emissions as our cleaner, betterregu­lated American oil-and -gas industry potentiall­y cedes market share to less clean Russian and Saudi producers. At the risk of stating the obvious, the developing world won’t stop demanding energy just because we decide to tax ourselves more.

Conservati­ves can either tackle the issue of carbon emissions sensibly by proposing workable solutions, or run the risk of allowing the Democrats to do it for us — with policies that would offer marginal environmen­tal benefits at a devastatin­g cost to the economy.

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