Daily Camera (Boulder)

We have a huge climate problem. It’s time for Congress to solve it.

- By Emerson Sturgis and Mark Reynolds Emerson Sturgis is a volunteer with the Boulder chapter of Citizens’ Climate Lobby. Mark Reynolds is the Executive Director of Citizens’ Climate Lobby.

When it comes to climate change, sometimes it feels like we can’t see the forest for the trees — the smoldering, wildfire-ravaged trees.

Public attention has been consumed this summer by shocking climate impacts. Acrid wildfire smoke has blighted skylines and polluted the air in nearly every region of the United States. Heat waves have put nearly half of Americans under heat watches as July temperatur­es soared globally to what scientists calculate is the hottest in 120,000 years. The waters off of Florida’s coast are ideal hot tub temperatur­es, killing coral and sea life. As UN Secretary-general, António Guterres, stated, “The era of global boiling has arrived.”

We have felt the impacts of climate change here in the West, too. We’ve seen destructiv­e wildfires and wildfire smoke.

Despite all of this, too many of our elected officials are still missing the big picture. Too many are asleep at the wheel on this issue, or worse, actively inflaming partisan divides and slowing progress on climate action. The issue is not just one plume of wildfire smoke, one flood, or one heatwave. The issue is human-caused climate change.

According to rapid attributio­n analysis by the World Weather Attributio­n team, the July 2023 heat extremes in the southweste­rn U.S. and southern Europe were “virtually impossible” without global warming.

In today’s human-altered climate, a heatwave of previously unpreceden­ted intensity is now expected to happen once every 15 years in the southweste­rn U.S. and once per decade in southern Europe. If global warming reaches the upper 2-degree Celsius target set in the Paris Agreement, these same heat waves will occur once every two to five years.

If ever the klaxon was sounding for a rapid and far-reaching reduction of carbon emissions, it is now.

In the last few years, Congress has made some progress. The 2022 Inflation Reduction Act unleashed a deluge of clean energy investment, including wind turbine manufactur­ing in Brighton and Windsor, solar panel manufactur­ing in Colorado Springs and battery storage in Pueblo. for Colorado. Through attractive incentives and credits, this legislatio­n also made it easier for American households to help themselves to cleaner air, energy-efficient homes and cars and abundant renewable energy (see rewiringam­erica.org/my-home). Our own Representa­tive, Rep. Joe Neguse, has supported several wildfire mitigation bills.

This is a good start, but we need to do even more. America’s greenhouse gas emissions still increased rapidly last year, and fossil fuel companies — whose products are at the root of our greenhouse gas emissions — raked in billions in profit as they continued their business as usual.

One encouragin­g step is the recent relaunch of the Climate Solutions Caucus in the U.S. House of Representa­tives, which has an equal number of Republican and

Democratic members committed to bipartisan climate action. This group should focus its energy on crafting bipartisan legislatio­n to drive down carbon emissions, such as a nationwide price on carbon pollution. Climate disasters affect red and blue states alike, and every American deserves to have their legislator­s fight to protect them and their loved ones. We hope to see Rep. Joe Neguse find a partner from across the aisle to join this important bipartisan group and commit to crafting the climate solutions we need in Colorado District 2.

Our members of Congress are elected to office to represent their constituen­ts. Right now, constituen­ts like us are hurting from our already-changing climate. Congress can no longer be passive on climate change. Not when backto-back climate extremes are causing death, destructio­n and ecological devastatio­n.

Everything we care about needs a livable world. We can’t accept a future where our leaders deny, delay and distract us because the reality of climate change is inconvenie­nt and challengin­g. We need our leaders to connect the dots. To grasp the scale of the threat. To see the forest through those smoldering trees.

We have the solutions to change our trajectory and thrive. So, Congress — it’s time to act.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States