[Congressional Record Volume 166, Number 7 (Monday, January 13, 2020)]
[Senate]
[Pages S157-S159]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Save Our Seas 2.0
Mr. SULLIVAN. Mr. President, I am sure all of my colleagues are going
to want to listen to this speech. I am on the floor with my colleagues
Senator Whitehouse and Senator Menendez to talk about some very
important legislation for our country, legislation that passed the
Senate last week. It is the Save Our Seas 2.0 legislation.
I begin by thanking Senator Whitehouse and Senator Menendez for their
leadership on this bill.
We are going to talk a little bit about the importance of it, why it
matters to Alaska, to New Jersey, to Rhode Island, and to the whole
country. This is a significant piece of legislation. It is, really, the
most comprehensive piece of legislation to pass the Congress--to pass
the Senate--that has dealt with ocean debris and ocean pollution--ever.
That sounds like a pretty hyperbolic phrase, but it is true. We checked
with the CRS. There has been nothing more comprehensive than this piece
of legislation that tackles an issue we all care about--clean oceans.
As a matter of fact, on Thursday night, 100 Senators passed this
after there having been a lot of work on the Committee on Commerce,
Science, and Transportation, on the Committee on Environment and Public
Works, and on the Committee on Foreign Relations. After about a year of
work on this, we finally got it passed. A number of Senators--Democrats
and Republicans--were cosponsors. I really want to thank the two
Senators who are on the floor right now. In particular, Senator
Whitehouse has been a real leader on these issues that deal with
oceans. This is an environmental issue that we can solve. Republicans
and Democrats in the Congress, the Trump administration in the White
House, and environmental and industry groups are all pulling on the
same oar, and we had a good start last Thursday on what this does.
I want to turn it over to my colleague from Rhode Island because, in
many ways, he has been the real leader, the driver, and is the founder
of the Oceans Caucus. Bit by bit, legislation by legislation, he and I
cosponsored the first Save Our Seas Act in the last Congress. To much
fanfare in the Oval Office, the President signed it, and now you are
starting to see people work on this. There is a whole section in the
USMCA on cleaning up our oceans. We have gone from Save Our Seas 1.0,
which has already passed into law, to Save Our Seas 2.0. I think it is
exciting, and I think the American people don't always hear about the
bipartisan work that is actually getting done on big issues that matter
to our Nation. There is a lot.
Cleaning up our oceans is one that matters to everybody and,
certainly, to my State, with its having more coastline than the rest of
the lower 48 combined. You don't even have to live in a coastal State
to care about this issue. Some of our cosponsors on this bill--on both
sides of the aisle--are from States that don't even have any coastline.
That is how important it is.
I want to turn it over to Senator Whitehouse. I thank him for his and
Senator Menendez' leadership. We will talk a little bit about what is
in it and what we are going to do next. This is a good day for the
environment in America. It is a good day for the oceans not just in our
country, not just in Alaska, not just in Rhode Island but in the world.
As a nation, if we are leading on this, which this legislation does,
then we are going to be able to help clean up our oceans all over the
world. We had a
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good start here on Thursday night in the U.S. Senate when we passed
this bill legislatively unanimously.
Again, to my colleague from Rhode Island, the floor is his.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Rhode Island.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, I come to the floor with a bunch of
thank-yous after Thursday evening's happy news that Save Our Seas 2.0
passed the U.S. Senate by unanimous consent.
I thank all of the Senate Members of our bipartisan Oceans Caucus.
The Oceans Caucus has been a really good forum for getting these bills
moving to a point at which they can pass by unanimous consent. I and
Senator Murkowski, who is Senator Sullivan's colleague from Alaska, set
it up years ago. It now has over 40 Members. It is very bipartisan, and
it has had a really important role in moving bipartisan oceans
legislation.
So, Oceans Caucus, thank you.
This bill, Save Our Seas 2.0, had to go through three committees. It
had to go through Commerce, Foreign Relations, and Environment and
Public Works. Let me start in reverse order because Senator Barrasso,
the chairman of the Committee on Environment and Public Works, is here
on the Senate floor. I express my appreciation to him and my
appreciation to our ranking member, Senator Carper, for having
shepherded this through the committee with unanimous committee support,
and that gave it a lot of momentum to go on to Foreign Relations and to
Commerce.
So, my friend Senator Barrasso, thank you, sir. I do appreciate it
very much. I think this is a score, a good win. A good deed was done
here.
Foreign Relations was also very important, and Senator Menendez, our
ranking member, is about to speak, so I will not steal his thunder. He
has been an incredibly valuable part of this triumvirate, and I am
extremely grateful to Senator Menendez.
Also, on the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation,
Senators Wicker and Cantwell were very helpful about making sure this
got through Commerce and were helpful once it was on the floor.
Most of all, though, my thanks go to Senator Sullivan, of Alaska. We
started down this road quite some time ago. We tentatively got into the
space of ocean plastic waste with a simple hearing in the Committee on
Environment and Public Works. He had an essential role in making that
happen because there was a turf conflict between our subcommittee and
the EPW and the Subcommittee on Science, Oceans, Fisheries, and Weather
within the Commerce Committee.
Now, if you are not from the Senate, you think that this is all crazy
talk, but if you are in the Senate, it is a really serious problem to
have to resolve. We had the very good fortune of having the chairman of
the Fisheries Subcommittee of the Commerce Committee and the chairman
of our subcommittee of the Environment and Public Works Committee being
the same individual, none other than Senator Dan Sullivan. So he went
out and had a nice debate with himself and was able to negotiate a
happy resolution of that turf dispute, and the hearing went forward.
Without that, it never would have happened. So that was the opening
bid.
Then we got to 1.0, which, admittedly, was not a very big bill, but
it was going to test the proposition: Was the Senate willing to
legislate on marine plastic waste? Yes. We got a big, booming, 100-vote
support for that in the Senate. Senator Sullivan was so happy with that
outcome that we immediately went to work on crafting 2.0, which, as
Senator Sullivan has pointed out, is not just a beachhead but is
significant marine plastic waste legislation. It will push the
administration to do a lot more, for more than half of the waste in the
oceans comes from 5 Asian countries, and more than 80 percent of the
waste in the oceans comes from 10 rivers in Asia and Africa. This is a
solvable problem if we direct attention and resources and solutions to
that problem, and I am really looking forward to following up on that.
I am really looking forward to getting right to work on Save Our Seas
3.0 because we are not done here. There is a lot of plastic mess out
there to clean up, and there is a lot of energy around getting even
more done.
So, Senator Sullivan, you have my great appreciation.
I will close, if I may, with one unlikely thank-you. As Senator
Sullivan mentioned, this reminded me that there are Senators who
supported this who don't even have coasts. They are from those square
end States in the middle of the country that don't have coasts. One of
them who has been very important to this has been Senator Inhofe, of
Oklahoma.
Now, on climate change, Senator Inhofe and I are at each other's
throats pretty much all of the time. We are always having fights about
climate change. I call him a climate denier, and he calls me a climate
alarmist. We go back and forth, fighting about climate change. Yet, on
this, he has been an essential ally, and having his support has sent, I
think, a terrific signal to the Senate that, hey, if Senator Whitehouse
and Senator Inhofe can agree on this, there is room for me in there
somewhere.
And so a final thank you to Senator Inhofe of Oklahoma, but the
biggest thank you, of course, is to Senator Sullivan, who really made
this happen.
With that, I yield to my colleague and friend Senator Menendez, who
has been so important to this, so he can add his thoughts.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Jersey.
Mr. MENENDEZ. Mr. President, it is a pleasure to join Senators
Whitehouse and Sullivan on the floor today to thank our colleagues for
passing the legislation that we have all coauthored to combat the
environmental crisis of plastic waste in our oceans.
Our partnership represents both the geographic and political urgency
behind this growing crisis. Save Our Seas 2.0 is a multifaceted effort
that will help the United States to better prevent plastic pollution,
respond to marine debris emergencies, and leverage U.S. foreign policy
and international engagement to prevent and clean up foreign sources of
plastic pollution.
We have a responsibility to protect the health of the world's oceans,
which regulate our climate, produce half of the Earth's oxygen supply,
and provide food to 2.6 billion people worldwide.
The environmental health of our world depends on healthy oceans, and
plastic pollution and marine debris are like cholesterol clogging
global ecosystems in countless ways. The reality is that plastic waste
in our ocean knows no borders. What may be a plastic wrapper floating
down a river in China today could be microplastic in your tuna salad
tomorrow.
Let me thank Senator Whitehouse, who has been so much engaged in our
oceans since his coming to the Senate--well, even before that, but,
certainly, as a leader in the Senate--and Senator Sullivan for their
longstanding bipartisan leadership on this issue and cooperation on the
bill.
I was happy to have supported the original Save Our Seas Act in the
115th Congress. Last year, when several international news stories
exposed the tragic environmental impact of plastic on our marine
environment, I began working on legislation to enhance U.S.
international engagement on this truly global crisis, which served as
the basis for title II of our bill. At the time, I was not immediately
aware that Senators Sullivan and Whitehouse were planning a second act,
so to speak, and I dearly appreciate being a part of the Save Our Seas
team.
I also want to thank Chairman Risch for supporting and advancing the
international components of this bill through the Foreign Relations
Committee, as well as all of the chairs and rankings who have already
been mentioned.
I think that advancing three component parts of the bill through all
of these respective committees, which is no small feat, and the 20
bipartisan cosponsors shows the Senate's broad support for action on
plastic waste.
New Jerseyans know all too well the threat of plastic pollution. Our
pristine beaches attract millions of people to the Jersey Shore each
year, and our coastal waters support everything from fishing and
recreation to the flow of trade, to our ports and harbors. No one wants
to swim in plastic or eat fish that fed on microplastic. That is why 25
New Jersey townships have passed local ordinances banning or phasing
down disposable plastic products, and
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another 26 may soon join them. There is also legislation pending in the
New Jersey State Legislature to limit the proliferation of disposal
plastics in New Jersey's economy.
With 40 percent of Americans living in coastal communities, my
constituents back home are far from the only ones grappling with the
hazards of plastic pollution in our oceans.
There is no question we still have work to do. As our bill heads to
the House, I look forward to continuing these efforts with Senators
Whitehouse and Sullivan and our cosponsors as we engage House leaders
to act on the bill this year.
Again, thank you to my colleagues. It is good. I know it doesn't
always get the headlines. The essence of a good story seems to be
conflict not cooperation, but I am thrilled to be a part of cooperation
that could make a difference in the lives not just of our oceans but of
our families.
I yield the floor.
Mr. SULLIVAN. Mr. President, I want to thank Senator Menendez and
Senator Whitehouse again for their leadership on this.
We have all seen the pictures and the news stories. The issue,
though, is a severe one. The World Economic Forum has estimated that if
we don't do anything about this big crisis of ocean debris, but
particularly the issue of plastics in the ocean, there are estimates
that by 2050 there will be more plastics by weight in the world's ocean
than there are fish. We can't let that happen.
So what we have done is we have put together this bill. As already
mentioned, there were three different committees. There is an element
on the domestic innovation side that creates a Marine Debris
Foundation. That is a congressionally chartered private organization.
Think of groups that matter to Americans. There are dozens of these
kinds of foundations, but they are important. They send a signal that
the Congress of the United States cares about these things. Think about
the Red Cross, the American Legion, and the National Parks Foundation.
These are all congressionally chartered organizations. The new Marine
Debris Foundation will be one of them.
The American Government is focused on this. It is an opportunity for
the private sector, and we have seen some industries step up. There is
a group called the Alliance to End Plastic Waste that has pledged $1.5
billion to start addressing this problem. That is not small change. It
is going to need that kind of money. Perhaps some of that can go into
this foundation.
There is an innovation prize. A lot of focus in our bill is on
innovation so that we can solve some of the big challenges in
chemistry--a plastic bottle that could fully biodegrade. We don't have
that yet, but these are some of the things that the bill looks at
doing.
Of course, Senator Menendez talked about the very substantial foreign
relations component because so much of the plastic waste in the oceans
comes from countries in Asia and Africa and 10 rivers, estimating
almost 80 to 90 percent of all of the plastic waste in all of the
oceans. So, again, it is solvable because it is definable.
Then, the third component is improving domestic infrastructure to
prevent marine debris through new grants and foreign studies for waste
management mitigation. So this covers a lot of different areas--
innovation, our domestic side, the international side.
We have momentum. We had a great group of bipartisan Senators--
Democrats and Republicans from all over the country and from all
political persuasions--showing that momentum. We have the Trump
administration fully behind this. In many ways, some of their Federal
agencies weighed in significantly to help us design this legislation,
and now we need to get it over to the House and move it in the House
soon and get it to the President's desk.
So this is a good day for the oceans and a good day for bipartisan
success in the U.S. Senate on an issue that people care about. People
really care about making sure that we have clean oceans and we are
making progress.
So I just want to leave it at that, and I will ask my colleague from
Rhode Island, who has been the real leader on this issue, to wrap it
up.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, I am delighted to close this out.
Again, I thank Senator Sullivan. I think there is reason to hope for a
really good appropriations subcommittee hearing on this subject in the
coming year. I think there is reason to hope for another Environmental
and Public Works Committee full committee hearing on marine plastics. I
expect those things will happen, and that will help us with our
progress.
One of the things I have come to admire about Senator Sullivan is
that, as a colonel in the U.S. Marines, he sets himself a mission and
then he goes about it with real vigor. One of the missions that he set
himself was to make sure that the Trump administration followed up on
what Save Our Seas 1.0 did.
There were a lot of doors that were knocked on that had their hinges
rattled by Senator Sullivan. There are a lot of administration
officials who probably had to hold the phone an inch or so away from
their ears because Senator Sullivan was trying to get their attention
on this subject.
Having seen him in action on Save Our Seas 1.0, I very much look
forward to watching him in action on Save Our Seas 2.0 and to make sure
that its legislative promise is fully realized in executive
implementation.
I yield the floor.
Mr. SULLIVAN. Mr. President, I look forward to another White House
signing of this with all of our colleagues. I am sure that the
administration is interested in it. You and I had a very eventful one
over at the White House a couple years ago.
So, again, the momentum is there. We are just going to keep building
on it.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, on to Save Our Seas 3.0.
Mr. SULLIVAN. I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority leader.
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