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Rep. Henry Waxman's Safe Climate ActPosted by David Roberts at 3:18 PM on 27 Jun 2006![]() For weeks now, I've had an open tab in Firefox with Rep. Henry Waxman's Safe Climate Act languishing in it, waiting for my loving bloggy ministrations. Today, I finally had a look, and Ana's right -- this is a more powerful and more sensible plan that the one Kerry described yesterday. The main reason, in my view, is not so much the stronger ultimate target (80% vs. 65% below 2000 emissions by the year 2050) but the incrementalism -- precisely the problem ffletcher identified. Here's the capsule version of the plan:
Here's how the targets will work: The Safe Climate Act (H.R. 5642) freezes U.S. greenhouse gas emissions in 2010, at the 2009 levels. Beginning in 2011, it cuts emissions by roughly 2% per year, reaching 1990 emissions levels by 2020. After 2020, it cuts emissions by roughly 5% per year. By 2050, emissions will be 80% lower than in 1990.
The great benefit of incremental targets -- as aptly described in this Worldchanging post -- is that they are predictable. They call for steady work and stable programs; they allow no procrastination and last-minute band-aids. As Matt Stoller says, Waxman seems to have really bright people on his staff. Kerry's speech and his plan have a bit of posturing and showmanship about them, but Waxman's is carefully and structurally sound, down to the details (check out the stuff about national energy-efficiency and renewable-energy standards). You can read a detailed description of the plan here or the full text here (PDF). I also highly recommend Waxman's statement. What need to happen next is for a Democrat to introduce the bill in the Senate. Someone looking to make this a defining issue in their political life. Obama? (Or, wait! Now that we have this sensible plan on the table, maybe the key is to start up a third party to magically get it passed!)
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