The News-Times (Sunday)

Let’s work together to solve climate change

- Marc Favreau lives in Bridgeport and is a member of Citizens’ Climate Lobby (CCL) Greater Bridgeport/Norwalk Chapter. Mark Reynolds is CCL executive director.

One fast-acting, effective climate policy we should enact is a carbon fee. Congress could charge a fee or price on all oil, gas and coal we use in the United States based on the greenhouse gas emissions they produce.

In the home stretch of the 2020 campaign, presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden leaned hard into the issue of climate change, giving a televised climate speech and running climatefoc­used ads in swing states. His campaign bet that this issue, once considered politicall­y risky, would now be a winner.

That bet paid off. The votes have been tallied, and candidate Biden is now president-elect Biden. As is often the case, though, his party doesn’t have unified control across the whole federal government. President Biden will govern alongside a Democratic House, a conservati­ve Supreme Court, and a Senate that could either have a slim Republican or Democratic majority. That makes “working together” the order of the day.

Encouragin­gly, Biden understand­s that people of any party can and do care about climate change. In a speech this fall, he said, “Hurricanes don’t swerve to avoid red states or blue states. Wildfires don’t skip towns that voted a certain way. The impacts of climate change don’t pick and choose. It’s not a partisan phenomenon, and our response should be the same.”

Some Republican­s in the Senate are expressing similar opinions. In October 2020, Sen. Lisa Murkowski (RArkansas) participat­ed in a climate policy webinar with her climate-hawk colleague, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-Rhode Island). She noted that bipartisan­ship gives a policy longevity, so she said, “Let’s work in a way that is going to get the support that you need from both Republican­s and Democrats.”

Our leaders here in Connecticu­t are signaling their readiness to work on climate change, too. Rep. Jim Himes (D-Connecticu­t) said recently in a virtual Town Hall on the Environmen­t that he is “Glad to see the activity in the House of Representa­tives with respect to the Select Committee on the Climate, but at the end of the day it didn’t make a strong enough statement. I am a believer that the foundation­al thing that we must do is correct the price of carbon and that much flows from that.”

These notable voices are responding to an incredible swell of public demand for climate action. According to the Yale Program on Climate Change Communicat­ion, the number of Americans who are “alarmed” about climate change has more than doubled in recent years, from 11 percent of Americans in 2015 to 26 percent in 2020. All told, 54 percent of Americans are either “alarmed” or “concerned” about climate change. According to the Yale Project, here in Fairfield County, a full 76 percent of adults understand that global warming is happening.

Frankly, those numbers make sense. This year has made it starkly obvious that climate change is here and already hurting Americans. More than 5 million acres have burned across Western states this year, displacing thousands of people. The Southeast has been battered by a record-breaking hurricane season, where storm after storm makes landfall before communitie­s even have time to recover from the previous one. We need to move as quickly as we can to address the root cause of these extreme events: excess greenhouse gas emissions.

One fast-acting, effective climate policy we should enact is a carbon fee. Congress could charge a fee or price on all oil, gas and coal we use in the United States based on the greenhouse gas emissions they produce. Putting that price on pollution will steer our country toward cleaner options, slashing our harmful emissions across many areas of our economy at once. The revenue from this type of policy can even be given to Americans on a regular basis — a “carbon cashback,” if you will, that would put money in people’s pockets while we transition to a clean-energy economy.

Carbon fee legislatio­n like this exists in Congress now, known as the Energy Innovation and Carbon Dividend Act (H.R. 763). It has support from people and organizati­ons across the political spectrum. Representa­tive Himes has endorsed the Act and has promised to do so when it’s re-introduced in the next session, barring any changes in the bill’s language. Officials from the City of Stamford and the Town of Greenwich have also passed resolution­s supporting the policy.

Our community backs Himes’ efforts to push forward to make this legislatio­n the law of the land and is ready for Senators Chris Murphy and Richard Blumenthal to do the same. With the incoming president clearly committed to addressing climate change, and millions of Americans eager for solutions, now is the time to act to encourage Congress to seize the opportunit­y.

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Getty Images/Science Photo Library

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