[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 58 (Tuesday, April 4, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H2633-H2634]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CLIMATE CHANGE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr. Quigley) for 5 minutes.
Mr. QUIGLEY. Mr. Speaker, there has been a lot going on around here
lately. We have been conducting investigations, holding hearings, and
some of us have even tried and failed to fundamentally change the way
we provide health care in this country.
It has been easy to get distracted by the dozens of different
headlines and breaking news stories we see each week. But no matter
what else is going on here in Washington, one thing continues unabated:
each day, the United States, like every other country on Earth,
continues to release tons and tons of carbon dioxide into the
atmosphere, and now we are starting to see the effects.
Over the last couple of years, the U.S. has joined 20 other countries
from around the world in growing its economy while reducing its annual
emissions into the atmosphere. This is not a small feat, and decoupling
emissions from growth is the first step toward the substantive action
needed to address the growing climate crisis. But I find this concept
of reducing emissions can sometimes be a little misleading.
In the last few years, the U.S. has reduced the rate that it emits
greenhouse gases. But even if we are doing it more slowly, we are still
emitting harmful pollution into our air.
Imagine, Mr. Speaker, standing at the edge of an empty swimming pool
with a garden hose. For a while, water was spewing out of that hose at
a torrent; and each year, the volume got greater and greater. Now, the
water is still running, but we have begun to turn the speed down.
However, even if we manage to slow the rate of water going in, the pool
still has more water than when we started and is still filling up.
Our atmosphere is that pool. For nearly 100 years, it has been
filling up with greenhouse gases. And they don't just go away when the
calendar flips. Reducing the annual emissions is vital, but we can't
lose track of all the gases that have been accumulated year after year.
If we are going to hit the international goal of limiting climate
warming to 2 degrees Celsius, we need to start acting now. Yet, this
august body has been behind the curve on this issue for years.
Our colleagues seem content to ignore the climate crisis, to hold
hearings with discredited, crank pseudoscientists bought and paid for
by corporate interests, or to deny the value of scientific thinking
altogether, an approach that is all too familiar given the post-
research, post-intelligence, post-truth mindset that we have seen from
this administration. They have adopted a ``hear no evil, see no evil,
speak no evil'' approach to climate change, hoping they can ignore it
until it goes away. Sadly, that is not the way the world works.
We can't unfill the pool by pretending there is no such thing as
water. This form of denial has been evolving over time. First, we heard
that there was no way that climate is changing at all.
Now that the changes in the atmosphere are beyond doubt, we are
starting to hear that climate is changing but there is nothing we can
do about it. In addition to being flat out false, that type of thinking
is unbecoming of a nation that put the first man on the Moon, pioneered
instantaneous communication, and has led the world in the fight against
countless deadly diseases.
Last month, we heard the Administrator of the Environmental
Protection Agency question the very fundamentals of atmospheric
science, a particularly dismaying thing from the man charged with
leading the fight against climate change. This type of willful
scientific ignorance has serious consequences. It will cost lives.
Children will be exposed to harmful, asthma-inducing pollution
because we didn't act fast enough to clean our air. They will die
because crops that could be counted on for generations will no longer
grow. They will be forced from their homes because melting polar ice is
driving sea levels higher and higher.
We cannot deny these impacts. We cannot continue to hear no evil and
see no evil when these changes are happening all around us, resulting
in devastating consequences that affect every aspect of our life.
[[Page H2634]]
Instead, the time has come to speak up and speak loudly like our
lives and the world depend on it, as it truly does.
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