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March 31, 2009 

Waxman-Markey Draft Sets Stage for Climate Legislation

WASHINGTON (March 31, 2009) — A "discussion draft" (pdf) for climate and energy legislation released today by Reps. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) and Edward Markey (D-Mass.) sets the stage for the federal government to rapidly adopt a comprehensive approach to energy and climate policy, according to the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS). House members will use the discussion draft as a starting point for crafting legislation.

Waxman, the chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, and Markey, the chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Energy and the Environment, have pledged to move a bill out of the Energy and Commerce committee by Memorial Day, Monday, May 25. The discussion draft release comes on the heels of President Obama reaffirming his pledge to move rapidly on comprehensive climate and energy legislation during a March 24 press conference.

Economists who have studied the issue of addressing global warming largely agree that reducing emissions is much less costly than failing to reduce emissions and adapting to resulting climate change.

"Increasing our reliance on clean energy sources would help pull our economy out of the ditch and prevent the worst consequences of global warming," said economist Michael Hanemann, a Chancellor's Professor in the Department of Agricultural & Resource Economics at the University of California Berkeley's Goldman School of Public Policy. "The energy efficiency provisions in the draft are a key way to reduce electricity bills for consumers as we transition to a clean energy economy. Doing nothing is the most expensive thing we can do. Opponents of energy and climate legislation want to keep us addicted to increasingly expensive fossil fuels and saddle us, our children and our grandchildren with the massive costs of unchecked climate change."

The timing of the discussion draft release sent a clear message to delegates attending a United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change meeting in Bonn, Germany this week, said UCS's strategy and policy director, Alden Meyer. The delegates, who are working on a successor agreement to the Kyoto Protocol, are expected to finalize a new treaty in December.

"Congress is helping to position the United States as an effective leader in the international climate treaty negotiations," said Meyer, who is at the Bonn meeting. "As opposed to the experience in Kyoto in 1997, other countries now are seeing real support in the Congress for binding limits on heat-trapping emissions. This improves the prospects for a new global agreement at the Copenhagen summit this December. The draft would also set aside funding to help developing countries protect their forests. Such funding can deliver significant emissions reductions and foster the kind of international cooperation we need to adopt and implement an effective climate treaty."

Lance Pierce, director of UCS's Climate Program, said the discussion draft highlights the full range of policies needed to address global warming. "This is a truly comprehensive outline," Pierce said. "Congress is looking at a market-based cap on emissions that works alongside smart energy and transportation polices. This broad approach is the best way to promote renewable energy sources, curb our oil dependence, and avoid the most expensive consequences of climate change."

BACKGROUND

According to a UCS analysis of a renewable electricity standard similar to the one included in the discussion draft, requiring all utilities to obtain 25 percent of their electricity from renewable energy sources by 2025 would create 297,000 new domestic jobs and save consumers $64.3 billion in lower electricity and natural gas bills. The analysis also found that this renewable electricity standard would generate $13.5 billion in new income for farmers, ranchers and rural landowners, and reduce global warming pollution by 277 million metric tons a year by 2025, the equivalent of the current annual output of 70 average-size coal-fired power plants.

The American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy estimates (pdf) that a national energy efficiency standard, such as the one included in the discussion draft, could save utility customers $168 billion through 2020 and create 220,000 jobs. In the year 2020, such a standard could reduce heat-trapping emissions by 260 million metric tons.

An Environmental Defense Fund synthesis (pdf) of five university and governmental studies found that comprehensive energy and climate policies would lead to only 0.5 percent less growth in the gross domestic product by 2030 and only 0.75 percent less growth in GDP by 2050. Meanwhile, a 2008 Natural Resources Defense Council study (pdf) projected that, if current trends continue, the total cost of climate change in the United States could be as high as 3.6 percent of GDP by 2100.

 

The Union of Concerned Scientists puts rigorous, independent science to work to solve our planet's most pressing problems. Joining with citizens across the country, we combine technical analysis and effective advocacy to create innovative, practical solutions for a healthy, safe, and sustainable future.

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