[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 21 (Monday, February 9, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S848-S849]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CLIMATE CHANGE
Mr. SCHATZ. Madam President, the Keystone legislation is likely to
move to the President's desk this week after the House takes it up, and
he will veto it. The votes are not there to override a veto, either in
the Senate or the House. Legislation has a natural lifecycle, and this
piece of legislation is reaching the end of its lifecycle. This debate
is almost over.
So where are we when it comes to American energy policy? The debate
that occurred on Keystone was no doubt an important one, but it was
exactly upside down. Congress and the media treated the Keystone bill
as if it would settle American energy policy once and for all, when in
fact it was and is a tiny sliver of debate. American energy policy is
not defined by one project or one piece of infrastructure, however
contentious it may be.
In order to have a real energy conversation, we have to agree on the
facts, and this body cannot be the only place where there is a lack of
consensus on the basic facts. That is why Senator Whitehouse's
amendment, my amendment, Senator Hoeven's amendment, and those of many
others were so important.
Last month's climate votes were illuminating and encouraging. First,
Senator Whitehouse's language, which simply stated that climate change
was not a hoax, received a nearly unanimous vote. Believe it or not,
that is progress. My amendment, which stated that climate change is
real, caused by humans, and has real and significant impacts, received
a bare majority of the votes, with five Republicans supporting it.
Senator Hoeven's amendment had similar language, as well as some pro-
Keystone language, and it attracted a dozen or so Republican votes.
What is the significance of all of this? It is very simple. Without
acknowledging the problem, we cannot even begin to work on it. The wall
of denial has begun to crack. So now we have a majority--and depending
on how it is phrased, even a potential supermajority--in the Senate
saying that climate change is real.
Now, most every serious person in public life either admits the basic
facts of climate change or is on their way to getting there, and that
is a good thing. Now the question is: What should we do? Given our
regional differences, ideological differences, and the partisan divide,
what comes next?
Later this year or next, we will see efforts to repeal a number of
important environmental rules, especially the administration's clean
power plan, which will regulate carbon pollution from existing and new
powerplants, but that too is highly unlikely to result in anything
other than a Presidential veto.
So are there any areas for potential common ground?
I think we saw real glimmers of hope and possibility during the
Keystone debate. Several of my Republican colleagues made the argument
during the debate on Keystone that while climate change is a real
problem, we must be aware of how energy costs influence economic
activity.
I could not agree more. We don't hear this often from folks on my
side of the debate, but price matters. No climate policy is a real
solution unless it strengthens both the national and global economies.
As we pursue clean energy, we must understand its impacts on
consumers--especially individuals and families in lower income
communities--as well as businesses. We miss an opportunity to find
common ground if we move too quickly past the questions of cost and the
social and economic context in which this transition is going to occur.
We can contend with these challenges in Congress through a
legislative solution. We can create incentives, create market-based
mechanisms, look at regional differences, and fund R&D to help develop
new and less-expensive solutions. EPA certainly has the authority and
the obligation under the law to regulate carbon and other greenhouse
gases. I support the President's Clean Power Plan because carbon
pollution is real and it ought to be regulated under the Clean Air Act.
If we want to be more comprehensive and if we want to be more nuanced
and more flexible and more responsive to communities, we need a bill.
Structured properly, a bill has the advantage of creating economically
efficient solutions that can reduce carbon pollution from a much wider
range of sources. That is why a well-designed fee on carbon is critical
for our economy and our environment.
I understand the politics are nearly impossible right now, but if we
think
[[Page S849]]
about our ability as legislators to remunerate communities struggling
during a transition, to ameliorate certain economic challenges, we may
agree that legislating provides us the tools to achieve greater
pollution reductions at a much lower social and economic cost. So once
the Clean Power Plan is established, once it is litigated, and once it
is full-on reality, I believe there may be room for compromise.
One more point on the issue of price. We have to do our calculations
on an all-in basis. That includes tax expenditures, environmental
damage, health impacts, and other so-called externalities. There is
plenty of good research which indicates that clean energy technology is
already competitive with fossil fuel technology when all costs are
added in. Additionally, the cost of solar, wind, and energy efficiency
is dropping precipitously and in many places is competing successfully
in the free market, even before we consider the costs of pollution.
We will have a couple of battles that are unavoidable--on the Clean
Power Plan and likely another run at Keystone--but there are a couple
of areas that in my view don't have to be a battle. They are energy
efficiency and energy research.
We ought to start with the Shaheen-Portman energy efficiency
legislation. I have little doubt that Democrats would support this as a
stand-alone bill. Energy efficiency is just common sense, and the
energy experts remind us of an idea our mothers and fathers taught us
growing up: waste not, want not. In other words, the straightest line
toward saving money for people, businesses, and institutions is to help
them adopt the latest energy efficiency practices and technologies.
Even this has unfortunately become a partisan issue in the last
several Congresses with people worried that light bulb efficiency
standards were part of some Orwellian plot. But that is not what these
Department of Energy standards do, and it is not what Shaheen-Portman
does.
At its core, energy efficiency is simply this: Use less but get the
same result. Using less means paying less. Getting the same result
means not having to sacrifice our way of life. The idea is not to ask
people to do without, the idea is to just get more for our money. It is
an old-school, conservative idea. Of course the Shaheen-Portman bill
doesn't cost the taxpayers a dime, and projections are that it will
create nearly 200,000 jobs.
I also think there is a lot of room for good bipartisan work in
advanced technology research in the energy space--the kind the
Department of Energy did for the State of Hawaii in developing a grid
system that can accommodate unprecedented levels of intermittent
renewable energy, the kind that made major advances in hydraulic
fracturing, the kind that has helped the price of solar panels drop 80
percent since 2008, the kind that is making breakthroughs in battery
storage, which has fallen in price by 40 percent since 2010, and the
kind that is working on carbon capture and sequestration.
America must lead on energy, and that requires us to do the kind of
basic research that private companies can eventually use. A relatively
small increase in research funding--both on the fossil and renewable
side--has been shown to make an enormous impact on our economy.
Investments in renewable and fossil fuel electricity generation,
distribution, and transmission systems, grid stability and security,
and fuel systems will enable America to lead in energy for decades to
come.
These are the kinds of investments we would see in a comprehensive
energy bill. I was so encouraged last week that the chairwoman of the
Energy and Natural Resources Committee, the Senator from Alaska, has
indicated her desire to pursue comprehensive legislation this Congress.
The Senator from Alaska is a very skilled bipartisan legislator, and I
am looking forward to working with her on these issues. I am especially
encouraged by her openness to climate provisions as part of that bill,
something she mentioned as recently as last week. Just as she has
listened to the concerns I and others have raised about climate change
during the Keystone debate, so should we listen to her call for
reliable, affordable, clean, and diverse energy supplies.
Several energy proposals contained within the President's fiscal year
budget could become a part of a bipartisan bill, including ideas to
more fully promote carbon capture and sequestration technologies and
protect coal workers and their communities as we transition. The
concerns of communities that have coal-based economies are real and
legitimate and I believe any true climate solution must prioritize
solutions for every American. The President recognized that and
proposed $55 million next year to help affected communities diversify
their economies, offer job training, and ensure a good transition.
This will require compromise. It will require those of us on the left
to concede that fossil fuels aren't going to disappear instantaneously,
and it will require those on the right to recognize that investing in
clean energy technologies doesn't necessarily mean picking winners and
losers. We have wind energy in nearly all States--in fact, more in
Republican than in Democratic States--and we have tea party members
everywhere who love the freedom and liberty that distributed
generation--rooftop solar--offers. We also have clean energy
progressives, including myself, who understand that we have to deal
with the energy system we have, not the one we wish we had.
The areas I have mentioned are not the only opportunities for
bipartisan compromise, but we do need to start a dialogue, either on
the floor, in committees or in informal discussions, about what we can
actually do. As we consider a policy solution, let's ask the following
questions: Can it be enacted into law? Will it advance American energy
security? Will it strengthen the economy and provide economic growth?
Will it reduce pollution?
There are a few areas where we are going to fight--there is no
avoiding it--and that is OK. But there is, for the first time since I
arrived, a glimmer of hope that we may be able to find common ground on
some of these issues and begin a serious discussion about tackling
American energy policy and climate change.
I yield the floor.
Madam President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. MURPHY. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
____________________