Why It Pays to Pass a Global Warming Bill

By Laura Bailey
Any self-respecting doctor would tell you it’s more cost effective to treat an ailing patient when the symptoms arrive than years down the road when the illness has grown.
Some of our nation’s legislators have taken wise note of the “ounce of prevention” philosophy by introducing a preliminary draft of a comprehensive climate bill, the American Clean Energy and Security Act. The draft was released on March 31 by Reps. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., and Ed Markey, D-Mass.
This historic legislation proposes to set strict limits on greenhouse gas emissions, requiring polluters to pay for the carbon dioxide they currently dump freely into the atmosphere.
The bill aims to significantly reduce greenhouse gas pollution, while also creating millions of clean energy jobs, setting federal renewable energy standards and promoting energy efficiency efforts.
However, other lawmakers continue to delay.
A group of Republican lawmakers, led by House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, have been trying to undermine support for the Waxman-Markey proposal, by trying to scare the public with bogus numbers, while failing to mention the risks that climate change, if not addressed, poses to communities across the country
Specifically, opponents have been busy with a misinformation campaign erroneously claiming that the bill would cost American families more than $3,000 per year. The basis of the campaign was the misuse of an MIT study, which Boehner was quickly reprimanded for misrepresenting (even by members of his own party). In the end, the study’s author John M. Reilly wrote to Boehner explaining that Boehner had misinterpreted the study and inflated the numbers by a factor of 10.
The nation simply can’t afford to let the naysayers triumph.
In fact, delaying climate legislation by just two years would require more than double the annual cuts in emissions necessary to achieve the goal of preventing a 2 degrees C warming, according an analysis by the Environmental Defense Fund.
And if we don’t let the healing begin, the economic toll of global warming will be all the more devastating when you factor in damage from rising sea levels, more frequent and intense hurricanes and wildfire and the costs associated with drought, to name a few.
The cost of inaction could lead to damage costing between 5 to 20 percent of the world’s gross domestic product, according to Sir Nicholas Stern, former chief economist for the World Bank.
Losses to state economies would be massive, and, according to testimony before Congress by the Reinsurance Association of America, “the sheer magnitude of climate change could impact a large number of industries to such an extent that sustainable insurability may ultimately be put into question.”
If we act now to curb carbon emissions, the cost will be far lower, and will yield the huge economic and social benefits that come with a clean energy economy.
Read more: global warming






comments
Andrew K, you look like this guy
http://www.kadir-buxton.com/
You may be biased, is this serious? Resetting the brain by smacking the person on the head and knocking them unconcious? Geeze, do that to me and I might even believe in Global Warming!
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Seems to me God has the who world in his hands. Isn't man being a little arrogant thinking he can change anything. I think we need more faith in God that faith in man. I can't see anything that mankind has done in the environment that has ever been successful. Seems to me that prayer would be more effective than anything the Global Warming Hucksters can do. i.e. the Indians did pretty well with their Rain Dance.
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Dennis - Yes, we are indeed "in a cooling trend" - but it has been SHORT-TERM (at best four years, not eight) and has NOT lead to an overall cooling over the last 100 years. WEATHER cause temps to go up and down over time (there are many cyclical factors which influence weather), but CLIMATE is based on long-term trends. Those long term trends have indeed been UPWARD:
http://www.worldclimatereport.com/wp-images/US_temps_2008.JPG
As to who is making money on the "scam", have you seen Exxon proffits lately? Think they may have a "conflict of interest"?
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Near-Zero CO2 Plan
All our power requirements are for lighting, heating, transport, and energy for such things as industry on down to exercise machines.
The lighting can be zero rated by building Buxton Geothermal Power Stations (BGTGs) which use the heat of the earth at depth by drilling ten kilometre deep holes.
The heating can be near-zero rated by installing Starlite coatings, which can prevent heat leaks, on the walls and ceilings of all premises.
Transport can be made near-zero in terms of carbon emissions by ensuring that all vehicles use BGTG electricity.
The carbon footprints of long range transport can be at least halved by having their fuels mixed permanently with water using an ultrasonic dibber.
Finally, the power needed for energy can be made entirely of BGTG electricity.
Mental illness costs the UK £100 billion per year, enough for the plan. The Kadir-Buxton Method can cure the ill in thirty seconds for free.
Reducing CO2 Levels Already Created
By creating as much biochar as possible we can take CO2 out of the atmosphere and oceans and store it safely in the soil. What we need is central planning, none of this will get done by the market which is obsessed by profits rather than results.
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We need to do something.
G. Warming needs to be stopped for humanity's sake.
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It is simply irresponsible to take any chances, may it be 5%, that mankind could be wiped out of the way. So the economical cost is not even the issue.
But we all know mankind IS irresponsible... And greed remaining one of the main levers of mankind's actions, it may be the lever to use to make those greedy people who rule the world at least act...
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True, Megan, but how do we accomplish the cease and desist? We need to incentivize it somehow- with bribes, or with fear, or in this case, with taxes. We already saw what happened when gas prices went up this past summer so dramatically- consumption went down almost as dramatically. That proves it's a tool that can be used- but not abused- to help lower consumption permanently.
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I'm sorry, but how does "paying" for the carbon dioxide that is currently being "freely" dumped into the air fixing the problem? Money is not the answer - stopping the dumping altogether is, right?
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Let's assume that trust is dead A victim of a thousand cuts. That being said, how can we trust any of these people to administrate the cap & trade system. These "leaders' will weasel benefits for their favorite countries and corporations and to practice the time honoured scams and self enrichment prorgrams they all live on?
I like the idea of across the board cuts, not trading, no intensity monkey business. Just cuts, without exemptions, without politics. Developing, developed and failed states should all be subject to the same rules. A take us as we are approach. The very idea of being a developed nation needs to be rewritten. Human rights, yes. But we alson need human responsibilities entrenched. Respect for the planet and all its inhabitants needs to be moved to the top of the priority list, wealth creation needs to be looked upon with suspicion. If for no other reason that in our current global economic matrix for some one to gain, others must lose. Up to to now nature has been the loser and is now on life support - we as the dominant species must accept responsibility for our actions and to future generations of all species yet to come. Lets not be the generation that saw our failings and fiddled while the planet burned.
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This is an immensely complex issue. Global warming is not a matter of a few decades. Parts of antarctica aren't breaking off because of 20 years of us overusing cards. But that doesn't mean cutting down on CO2 emissions won't help. If the scientists can't even agree on what's causing it, what makes us think we can arbitrarily decide who's right? Truth is, it's a number of factors.
And we should work together to decrease ALL risk factors for global warming. Because no one can honestly say that driving a gas guzzler is GOOD for the environment.
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