[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 42 (Thursday, March 13, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H2368-H2369]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SAFE CLIMATE CAUCUS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Mrs. Capps) for 5 minutes.
Mrs. CAPPS. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to call attention to a critical
issue that is hurting our communities, it is hurting our economy and
our environment, and that issue is climate change.
Climate change is already having real impacts, affecting real people
and real communities with more extreme storms, severe droughts, heat
waves, and more. We are beginning to see long-term and serious impacts
on public health, on agriculture, and natural resources.
Of course, climate change not only impacts us here onshore, but
offshore as well. Ocean acidification, one of the most serious impacts
of climate change, is changing the chemistry of our oceans and
threatening the economic future of our coastal communities.
As our oceans absorb more and more carbon from the atmosphere, they
grow more and more acidic, threatening many marine organisms and the
communities that depend upon them.
Experts are telling us that today's rate of ocean acidification may
be unprecedented in the Earth's history. It is estimated to be
increasing 10 to 100 times faster than any time in the past 50 million
years.
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Ocean acidification threatens everything from the tiny plankton to
form the foundation of marine food webs, to the larger shellfish that
we all enjoy. These impacts will not only hurt our ocean ecosystems and
environment, but they will significantly hurt our economy as well.
The oceans support one in every six American jobs; so without healthy
oceans, we stand to lose a lot of American jobs and economic
opportunities, not to mention the cultural, ecological, and
recreational losses to our coastal communities.
In my district, there is a diverse array of fishermen, scientists,
and nongovernmental organizations who are all seriously concerned about
this issue. They are coming together to find ways to better understand
and mitigate the effects of ocean acidification on key fisheries and
ecosystems.
While the initial costs may be felt locally, the long-term costs of
ocean acidification will be felt around this globe. We simply can't
afford to continue ignoring this critical problem. While we certainly
must cut the greenhouse gas emissions that are driving climate change
and ocean acidification, we must also prepare for the inevitable
impacts.
That is why I am working with my colleagues to find bipartisan
solutions to increase our understanding of ocean acidification and to
develop adaptation strategies.
That means supporting efforts to increase research and to monitor a
better understanding of the problem, and it means coordinating and
planning on a local level to prepare communities for changing coastal
landscape. That means forming strategic partnerships to increase our
capacity to find creative solutions.
There are many things we can do to help, but there is one thing we
must all agree upon: inaction is not an option.
Mr. Speaker, we have a responsibility to help prepare our communities
and our economy from the impacts of climate change. We cannot afford to
sit on our hands and do nothing.
I urge my colleagues to join me in taking action to save our oceans
to combat global climate change.
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