By Sarah Mosko
President Trump may have withdrawn the United States from the landmark 2015 Paris Climate Agreement, but this is no time for the 70 percent of Americans who believe climate change is happening to recoil in defeat.
Rather, we should feel empowered that a 2016 post-election poll of registered voters found that majorities of Democrats (86 percent), Independents (61 percent) and Republicans (51 percent) alike wanted the United States to participate in the accord and that two out of three voters said the United States should reduce its greenhouse gas emissions regardless of what other countries do.
It is exactly the time to speak out against the misguided actions of the White House by taking decisive steps well within our reach as individual citizens and communities. After all, the Paris agreement is only a broad-stroke commitment from participating countries to collectively limit global warming to 1.5 to 2.0 degrees Celsius compared to pre-industrial levels. And only Congress and legislative bodies at the state and local level, not the President, can enact laws that will move us from fossil fuels to a sustainable energy economy.
So here’s what’s happening at various jurisdictions around the nation already.
Efforts are underway to pass state-level carbon pricing mechanisms, with the ultimate goal to pressure Congress to act nationally on climate change. The state of New York enacted a carbon price on fuels in 2015, and various bills taxing carbon are in play in Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Utah, Vermont and Washington.
Oregon has already set a cap on carbon emissions, and in California, three bills are being considered that would strengthen its cap-and-trade system, which was renewed to 2030 last month. California has also passed the first state-level resolution entreating Congress to enact a national carbon tax (the dividends would go to low- and middle-income residents to offset resulting price rises in consumer products).
Local jurisdictions around the nation are also feeling how critical it is to send a strong message to their representatives on Capitol Hill. Eleven cities have passed general resolutions calling on Congress to act on climate change, and resolutions passed in 35 other cities and counties, including 12 in California, more specifically petition for some form of a national carbon fee and dividend plan. An entity as small as a city council can send Congress the same message, as has been done in Grand Marais, MN.
The City of San Diego passed a ground-breaking and legally binding Climate Action Plan in December 2015 which commits the city to 51 percent greenhouse gas reduction from 2010 levels by 2035. The plan’s strategies include 100 percent of electricity from renewable sources.
The 2016 post-election poll of registered voters revealed that nearly eight out of ten supported placing a tax on or regulating global warming pollution. Given the depth of the political divide in America these days, that’s an encouragingly high level of agreement. And, despite the apparent intransigence on Capitol Hill to tackling global warming, change is actually afoot politically that is too infrequently reported in the press.
The nascent Climate Solutions Caucus in the House — by design half Republicans and half Democrats committed to addressing climate change — has already grown to 52 members since its inception in February 2016. What’s more, caucus members introduced a major legislative step forward in May, the Climate Solutions Commissions Act, which would establish a commission to scientifically evaluate different approaches to reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
Every American has it within his or her power to contribute to the growing momentum at community, state and national levels to address climate change head on. Having your voice heard can be as simple as phoning your elected representatives to state your concerns to greater involvement through participation in local organizations focused on climate change solutions. This is how change happens. This is democracy at its finest.
With its climate action plan already in place, the City of San Diego should now do what 46 other local jurisdictions across the country have done — pass a resolution telling Congress to step up and lead the rest of the world in addressing the crisis of global climate change.
Sarah “Steve” Mosko is a licensed psychologist, sleep disorders specialist, and freelance environmental writer who grew up in San Diego but currently lives in Orange County.