Help needed from a Policy-loving or summary-loving volunteer: EICDA
(posted also in Liaisons and Group Leaders Group Forums)
Hello Fellow CCLers- I am in need of some help summarizing, in succinct format, how the EICDA meets the 7 principles outlined in the June 2020 Climate Crisis Action Plan - the product resulting from the work of the House Select Committee on the Climate Crisis. My MOC was a member of the committee and would support a carbon price that meets the principles outlined on page 286. ( If you wonder who else was on the committee - Other Democrat members are listed on the 2nd page. ) I assume other MOCs who were on this committee would find this information helpful to garner their support too. Is anyone out there interested in drafting a document that describes how the EICDA meets these 7 principles? I envision a 1-page (no more than 2 pg) document.
The principles are pasted here for reference:
Carbon pricing can take many forms. The majority staff for the Select Committee offers the following principles for designing an effective and equitable carbon pricing system:
1. Congress should establish a carbon pricing system designed to achieve America’s economywide greenhouse gas emissions reduction goal of net-zero by no later than 2050.
2. Congress should consider a carbon price as only one tool to complement a suite of policies to achieve deep pollution reductions and strengthen community resilience to climate impacts. Carbon pricing is not a silver bullet.
3. Congress should ensure that energy-intensive, trade-exposed domestic industries that are working to reduce pollution remain on a level playing field with foreign competitors that use dirtier technologies.
4. Congress should ensure low- and moderate-income households benefit from a national carbon price.
5. Congress should pair a carbon price with policies to achieve measurable air pollution reductions from facilities located in environmental justice (EJ) communities, which face chronic and acute health impacts from a legacy of industrial development in their neighborhoods.
6. Congress should respect states and localities that have led the nation in climate action, ensure that a national carbon price complements and builds on their programs, and apply the lessons learned from their experiences and other international approaches.
7. Congress should not offer liability relief or nullify Clean Air Act authorities or other existing statutory duties to cut pollution in exchange for a carbon price.
Let me know if you are interested in helping me with this by responding here. Hoping people will respond within a week with some sort of estimate of when they think they can get a draft done.
Thank you. Daniela
Search Forums
Forum help
Select a question below
CCL Community Guidelines
- Discuss, ask and share
- Be respectful
- Respect confidentiality
- Protect privacy
CCL Blog Policy Area Categories
- Price on Carbon
- CBAM
- Clean Energy Permitting Reform
- Healthy Forests
- Building Electrification and Efficiency