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On Eve of Copenhagen, States Leading Fight to Solve Global Warming
Trenton – The United States, long considered a laggard in
addressing global warming, is poised to achieve large reductions in global
warming pollution thanks to clean energy policies adopted over the past decade
by state governments, according to a new report by the Environment America
Research & Policy Center.
“While there’s no doubt that Congress must pass a comprehensive climate
bill, our research shows that the states have delivered a down payment on the
pollution reductions,” said Matt Elliott of Environment New Jersey – the state chapter of the
national Environment America federation.
The new report, America on the Move, released just days before world
leaders convene in Copenhagen
to negotiate an international agreement on global warming, found that state
policies, if fully realized, will reduce global warming pollution by
approximately 536 million metric tons of carbon dioxide-equivalent per
year by 2020 compared to business as usual.
“America’s clean energy
revolution – led by the states – shows that the nation is ready to tackle the
challenge of global warming,” said Assemblywoman
Valerie Vainieri Huttle (D-Bergen), a prime sponsor of New Jersey’s Global Warming Response
Act. “President Obama should take the next step by working to forge a
strong agreement to address global warming during the international
negotiations in Copenhagen,”
she added.
Assembly Environment and Solid Waste Committee chairman John F. McKeon
welcomed the news of significant greenhouse gas reductions projected in today’s
report and commended New Jersey’s
environmental stewardship in the fight against climate change.
“Today’s report testifies to the significant accomplishments of our nation's
environmental stewards in helping deliver real, positive change to protect the
environment,” McKeon (D-Essex) said. “New Jersey has been at
the forefront of the fight against climate change with the nation’s most
aggressive greenhouse reduction targets, the first market-based cap and trade
program, and an Energy Master Plan which provides for 30% of all the state’s
energy consumption coming from renewable sources by 2020,” McKeon added. “But
our environment demands eternal vigilance and we must continue to move forward
to protect and preserve our planet from global warming.”
The emission reductions that will be realized by New Jersey and other leading states are
significant. They represent:
More global warming pollution
than is currently emitted annually by all but eight of the world’s
nations;
Approximately 7 percent of U.S.
global warming pollution in 2007;
Annual emissions from 104
million cars – about 42 percent of the nation’s motor vehicles;
Annual emissions from 163
coal-fired power plants – about 27 percent of the nation’s coal-fired
power plant fleet.
America on the Move reviewed more than 100 policies adopted by
states, most of them enacted over the past decade, and estimated the emission
reductions that will result from those actions.
For example, while the U.S. Congress has yet to adopt a binding national
limit on global warming pollution, six U.S. states – New Jersey, California,
Connecticut, Hawaii, Massachusetts, and Maryland – have adopted such
limits. These six states account for nearly a quarter of America’s
economic output and 13 percent of its fossil fuel-related carbon dioxide emissions.
If these six states were a separate country, they would rank as the world’s
fifth-largest economy and seventh-leading emitter of carbon dioxide.
Collectively, these six states have committed to reducing global warming
pollution by approximately 13 percent below 2005 levels by 2020. Including a
regional cap on power plant emissions adopted by 10 northeastern states,
mandatory emission caps will reduce U.S.
emissions by approximately 270 million metric tons per year by 2020 – a level
of carbon dioxide pollution comparable to that produced annually by the Netherlands or Turkey.
According to the report, additional reductions will result from a variety of
clean energy policies adopted by multiple states, including renewable
electricity standards adopted by 29 states, energy efficiency resource
standards adopted by 22 states, and a variety of other policies.
“Today’s report brings encouraging
news of the forward movement we have made as a state and a nation in reducing
greenhouse gas emissions,” said Assemblyman Upendra Chivukula
(D-Somerset). “New Jersey was among the first to
participate in the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) - a multi-state
compact which provides for an innovative market based 'cap & trade'
program to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. New Jersey’s Energy Master Plan sets
aggressive goals for an alternative energy economy based on renewable sources
and we also passed the landmark Global Warming Response Act which sets the most
aggressive carbon emissions reduction targets in the nation. While a lot has
been accomplished, we need to keep moving forward in our fight against climate
change,” Chivukula added.
Moreover, since President Obama’s inauguration in January, the federal
government has implemented several policies initiated by the states nationwide
– including limits on vehicle global warming pollution adopted by California and 13 other
states, strong energy efficiency standards for appliances and lighting, and
strong building energy codes. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act,
passed by Congress in February, also supports a variety of state and local
programs to save energy and reduce global warming pollution.
“When it comes to America’s
response to global warming, what’s happening on Capitol Hill is only half the
story,” said Elliott. “States have great power to reduce global warming
pollution within their borders and many states are now using that power to
implement clean energy policies that rival those in place anywhere in the
world,” he added.
Environment New Jersey and Environment America urged the federal government
to require reductions in global warming pollution in the United States
consistent with the reductions scientists say are necessary to prevent the
worst impacts of global warming – specifically, emission reductions of 35
percent below 2005 levels by 2020 and at least 83 percent below 2005 levels by
2050, with the vast majority of those reductions to occur domestically. The
groups also encouraged the federal government to implement the best clean
energy policies in place at the state level, and urged states to continue to
take leadership in adopting and implementing policies to reduce global warming
pollution.
“States have been called America’s
‘laboratories of democracy,’” said Elliott. “By taking strong action to address
global warming, states are showing the nation – and the world – that a clean
energy future is within our reach. But
there’s no doubt that we have more work to do. In New Jersey, we need to kick it into high
gear and immediately enact policies that will promote wind, solar, and energy
efficiency measures that will ensure that we meet our global warming reduction
mandates. And in Washington,
DC, our Congressional leaders
must approve strong, nation-wide climate legislation sooner than later. We
can’t wait another day,” Elliott concluded.
“New Jersey
is very lucky to have Environment New Jersey as a partner in addressing global
warming,” said Assemblyman Peter J. Barnes III (D-Edison). As representatives from around the world meet
in Copenhagen
to discuss a comprehensive plan to address global warming, Environment New
Jersey will continue to lead the fight on protecting our precious natural
resources,” Barnes said.