[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 137 (Wednesday, November 12, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5898-S5899]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
U.S.-CHINA CLIMATE AGREEMENT
Mr. SCHATZ. Mr. President, I rise to commend the historic agreement
reached yesterday between the United States and China, the world's
largest emitters of carbon pollution. This agreement is the latest and
perhaps most consequential in a string of actions President Obama has
taken to fight climate change.
Today, we have hope. We have hope because this agreement puts the
world on a path towards solving climate change--hope because the
world's two largest emitters have found common cause in protecting
public health and economic opportunity for their citizens and for the
world and hope because we are once again reminded what American
leadership and political will can accomplish.
President Obama and President Xi of China recognize that climate
change threatens our families, our jobs, our health, and our way of
life. They deserve our thanks, as does Secretary Kerry, for their
tireless work and dedication to this cause.
We can solve this. We know what we need to do, and we know how to do
it. Today we see what political will can accomplish. I am now more
hopeful than ever that we can keep warming below 2 degrees Celsius by
the end of the century. This is the level scientists say is necessary
to stay below in order to avoid catastrophic global consequences.
Together our two countries account for about 40 percent of the
world's greenhouse gas emissions. We have a responsibility to act early
and to act together, and this agreement puts us on that path.
The agreement recognizes that the United States and China must take
short- and long-term measures to reduce emissions and encourage the
development of clean energy. This represents a major shift for China,
which had struggled to balance economic growth with growing pollution
and has now agreed to cap carbon pollution for the first time ever. It
is difficult to overstate what an important achievement this is,
especially a full year before the next round of international
negotiations in Paris.
As Secretary Kerry said today, this is a major signal to other
countries that they should also put forth ambitious emissions reduction
goals well before international negotiations start in 2015.
In addition, China has agreed to get a full 20 percent of its energy
from zero emission sources by 2030. This means China will have to
deploy close to 1,000 gigawatts of new zero emission powerplants. This
is the amount of electricity the entire United States currently
generates and shows just how serious China is about addressing this
problem.
American leadership was crucial in forging these goals. It wouldn't
have been possible without the President's Clean Power Plan, which will
reduce emissions from the power sector by 30 percent relative to 2005
levels by the year 2030.
This agreement goes beyond even those ambitious targets, and in the
coming months and years, it will be important for this President and
the next to maintain and strengthen the Environmental Protection
Agency's ability to protect Americans from harmful pollution.
Despite near universal consensus among climate scientists that the
Clean Power Plan is part of the solution to fighting climate change,
today that plan is under attack in Congress. Right after the President
announced this historic agreement, climate deniers in Congress started
rolling out every tired argument in the book. In fact, one of our
colleagues here has already dubbed this plan ``unrealistic'' and called
it an ``ideological war.''
These claims are the last bastion of a hopeless cause that ignores
what we see all around us--from farmers to fishermen to small-town
mayors. Theirs is an untenable position, because poll after poll shows
that Americans do care about this issue. They care about it deeply.
Americans care because they know fighting climate change is really
about protecting their children's health, protecting economic
opportunity, and leaving our children a world better than our own.
We are seeing the deniers' arguments collapse around them. One of
their favorite tropes was to claim that U.S. actions are meaningless
without action from China. Well, it looks as though that argument took
a fairly big hit yesterday.
In fact, the U.S. did act first by developing the Clean Power Plan.
The rules haven't even been finalized, but they are already giving us
the leverage to reach major international agreements.
As excuse after excuse fails, we will see climate deniers retreat to
tired claims that anything we do to reduce pollution will hurt the
economy. But remember that we have heard these claims before. They were
wrong then, and they are wrong now.
The list is long, so I will mention just a few. Taking the lead out
of gasoline, putting catalytic converters in cars, reducing acid rain,
all were met with panicky claims of economic devastation. But what we
have learned is that keeping our air and our water clean actually helps
our economy.
This agreement between the United States and China is historic. It is
a real breakthrough, and it gives us hope that we will be able to
confront and resolve one of the greatest challenges of our time. But it
is still just an agreement.
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We need to follow through with action. We must listen to the American
people and amplify their voices as they call for action to preserve our
health, our economy, and our way of life.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Brown). The Senator from Louisiana.
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