Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Florida conservati­ves embrace climate action

- By Bob Inglis Former U.S. Rep. Bob Inglis, R-S.C., directs republicEn.org, a community of conservati­ves advancing free enterprise solutions to climate change. “The Invading Sea” is the opinion arm of the Florida Climate Reporting Network, a collaborat­ive

Florida is proof that attitudes have changed among conservati­ves on climate change. Republican­s and Democrats alike notice more active hurricane seasons, the sunny day flooding, the more intense rain events and the conditions that are ripe for algae blooms.

Those blooms caused incalculab­le damage to coastal ecosystems and Florida’s tourism-driven economy, which prompted some of Florida’s Republican leaders to talk seriously about climate change. These lawmakers are responding to the facts on the ground, which are overtaking the state. They accept that the problem of climate change — just like the problem of COVID-19 — can’t be willed away, but a way can be willed to solve it.

Former Florida GOP Congressma­n Carlos Curbelo has the will. He saw the rising seas and storms that routinely flood his district, and he led. His carbon pricing bill was the first introduced by a Republican since my own bill in 2009. Sadly, the bill did not advance in a U.S. House of Representa­tives that instead prioritize­d meaningles­s votes on an anti-carbon tax resolution.

Florida GOP Congressma­n Francis Rooney stepped forward to lead after Hurricane Irma blazed through his district. Rooney saw how the Florida Coral Reef Tract and the Everglades ecosystems spared Collier County by weakening the storm before it impacted the developed area.

An avid outdoorsma­n, his familiarit­y with vulnerable ecosystems coupled with his business acumen led him to champion several pieces of climate legislatio­n that rely on free market solutions to curb greenhouse gas emissions.

Florida’s governor and state lawmakers are also rising to the climate challenge. Following his victory in 2018, Gov.

Ron DeSantis embraced climate science by appointing the state’s first chief science officer and first chief resilience officer. He also appointed a task force that recognized the roles that climate change plays in sustaining and intensifyi­ng harmful algal blooms. At his urging, the Florida Legislatur­e passed foundation­al water bills and record funding that strive for climate-resilient ecosystems and water infrastruc­ture.

DeSantis has been rewarded for those efforts by positive approval ratings for his environmen­tal leadership. And he seems determined to take more meaningful action on climate change.

Recently, he announced the addition of 74 electric vehicle charging stations along highways — a major step toward preparing vital transporta­tion infrastruc­ture for an emissions-free future. He saved taxpayers $8.6 million by paying for the stations with fines from the Volkswagen Clean Air Act settlement. He says that more of those funds will be used for additional charging stations.

And he has done all this in the face of the global COVID-19 pandemic, which is hitting Florida hard. But as the governor knows, climate change isn’t going to wait for the novel coronaviru­s to go away. He needs to keep his foot on the pedal, focused on actionable items that will not only benefit the Sunshine State, but serve as an example across the U.S.

Free market solutions to climate change are embedded in conservati­ve principles and supported by right-ofcenter economists. You don’t need to grow the government or rely on redtape-riddled regulation­s to solve the climate crisis. But you do need conservati­ve leadership, like that of DeSantis. Conservati­ves need to return home to our economic and environmen­tal roots and commit to rebuilding this country on a clean energy economy or else more lives, ecosystems and property will be lost, while the economy fails to rebound.

Conservati­ves are finally getting in the climate game. Especially in the face of so many other challenges, we cannot give up now.

You don’t need to grow the government or rely on red-tape-riddled regulation­s to solve the climate crisis. But you do need conservati­ve leadership, like that of DeSantis.

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