The Sentinel-Record

Do- nothing Republican­s on climate change

- Eugene Robinson Copyright 2015, Washington Post Writers group

WASHINGTON — The vast majority of scientists who have devoted their profession­al lives to studying the Earth’s climate believe human- induced warming is an urgent problem requiring bold action. Republican candidates for president insist they know better.

With one possible exception — Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who barely registers in the polls — GOP contenders either doubt the scientific consensus on climate change or oppose attempts to do anything about it.

This promises to be one of the starkest ideologica­l divides facing voters next year.

No pressure; it’s only the fate of the planet hanging in the balance.

Before President Obama could even announce his administra­tion’s tough new curbs on carbon emissions from power plants, Republican hopefuls launched pre- emptive attacks. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, who flat- out denies that climate change is taking place, accused scientists of “cooking the books” and Democrats of choosing “California environmen­talist billionair­es and their campaign donations” over “the jobs of union members.”

Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida charged that the new rules “will make the cost of electricit­y high for millions of Americans.” Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush called the regulation­s “unconstitu­tional” and claimed they would cost jobs.

These comments came at Sunday’s Freedom Partners forum, organized by conservati­ve billionair­es Charles and David Ko c h to give GOP candidates a chance to strut their st u ff . In that setting, I suppose, reality- based rhetoric would be too much to hope for.

For the record, let’s take a moment to deal with the above- quoted blather, which is typical of the lines of “argument” from the multitudin­ous GOP field.

To claim there is no atmospheri­c warming, Cruz cherry- picks one set of satellite measuremen­t data — paying no attention to other data sets, which show continued warming — and chooses 1998 as a starting point.

But that year was an obvious outlier; temperatur­es took a huge and anomalous leap, likely because of an unusually strong El Nino phenomenon in the Pacific Ocean.

Any graph of yearly global temperatur­es forms a saw- tooth pattern, but the overall trend is unambiguou­sly upward. Cruz and other climate- change deniers ignore the fact that nine of the 10 hottest years on record have occurred since the turn of the century — the one exception being 1998.

The deniers also pretend to be unaware that the concentrat­ion of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has in c reased by a stunning 40 percent since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, when humans began burning fossil fuels in large quantities. Unless Cruz has rewritten the fundamenta­l rules of physics, such as increase has to cause warming.

Rubio claims the new carbon rules will be too expensive for consumers, but he seems not to know that utility companies are already moving away from coal, which releases more carbon dioxide than other fuels such as natural gas. The Obama administra­tion has estimated that electricit­y prices might rise 4.9 percent by 2020 — a small price to pay given the stakes.

As for Bush’s claim that the regulation­s are unconstitu­tional, the Supreme Court ruled last year that the Environmen­tal Protection Agency has the authority under the Clean Air Act to regulate carbon emissions by power plants, factories and other polluting facilities.

The 7- 2 decision was written by Justice Antonin Scalia. Enough said.

The rest of the GOP field ranges from hopeless to hapless on the issue. Front- runner Donald Trump — I can’t believe I wrote those words, but that’s what he is — firmly belongs in the former camp. He has called global warming a “hoax” and once said the whole idea “was created by and for the Chinese in order to make U. S. manufactur­ing noncompeti­tive.” Trump has also cited cold winter weather in the United States as “evidence.”

These Republican­s seem to forget that the Earth is really, really big — so big that it can be cold in one place, such as Manhattan, and hot in other places. At the very same time.

Of the other candidates, Ohio Gov. John Kasich, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, former New York Gov. George Pataki and businesswo­man Carly Fiorina have all at times acknowledg­ed the scientific consensus on climate change but hemmed and hawed about what, if any, action to take.

Rick Santorum joins Trump and Cruz in full denial. The rest — Scott Walker, Mike Huckabee, Rick Perry, Rand Paul, Bobby Jindal, Ben Carson and Jim Gilmore — either aren’t sure warming is taking place or don’t know if humans are causing it.

Democrats Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders both promise even tougher action against climate change than Obama has taken. This is a very big reason why elections matter.

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