Dems Crafting New Climate Change Message
Reps. Edward Markey (D-Mass.) and Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.) accused Republicans on Monday of being in denial over climate change.
The pair held a briefing during which they called on experts to provide them with talking points to use against GOP members who disagree that global warming is a mad-made problem.
“If a member of Congress came up to Mr. Waxman and I and said, ‘there is no global warming,’ can I tell them they’re wrong?” Markey asked Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature Project Director Dr. Richard Muller.
“The evidence is compelling that there is global warming,” Muller responded. “But if you say to them, ‘but we’re uncertain how much of it is due to humans,’ you may have a chance of winning them over.”
After further questions regarding a response to the GOP’s attribution of climate change to the “heat island effect,” Muller responded they should cite the Berkley Earth study that reported climate changes in rural stations and thus could not be attributed to the effect.
Dr. Ben Santer, research scientist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, and Dr. William Chameides, dean of Duke University’s Nicholas School of the Environment and vice chairman of the National Academies’ Committee on America’s Climate Choices, provided Markey and Waxman with a persuasive argument on the urgent need to pass legislation to control global warming.
“To make a choice to not act now is extremely imprudent,” Chameides said. “The prudent thing to do is to begin to act now and address climate change to give us the room to continue to adjust as we learn more.”
“Everything that I understand about this problem…does indeed suggest that there is a marked imprint of human activity on our climate system,” Santer added. “To ignore that would mean jeopardizing not only our own futures but the life and livelihood of our future generations. They will be inheriting a different climate future if we do nothing about this problem.”
The GOP-controlled House has voted 21 times, in this session alone, to block actions to address climate change, said the Democratic lawmakers.
Senate Republicans Wary Of Possible Climate Change Pledge In Copenhagen
While President Barack Obama is taking the Environmental Protection Agency's ruling of the dangers and the toxicity of CO2 emissions and greenhouse gasses (GHGs) to Copenhagen climate change conference, Senate Minority Whip Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.) told reporters Thursday that the Senate must ratify any proposed climate change pledge that President Barack Obama will make during his visit.
“Any action that would be binding on the U.S., in the form of an international agreement, will of course have to be ratified by the U.S. Senate,” Kyl said at a press conference Thursday.
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) spoke out against the possibility of the EPA and President Obama making any law on CO2 emissions or climate change.
“We’re not going to allow the Executive Branch or the Environmental Protection Agency, through the Clean Air Act or any other act, appropriate themselves the power to make laws to govern the people of the U.S.,” Graham said.
Ranking Member of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) said she will file a resolution of disapproval in hopes of stopping the EPA from regulating GHGs.