GROWING GOP CHORUS FOR SENSIBLE CLIMATE STRATEGY
There is unmistakably a growing chorus of congressional Republican leaders calling for technological innovation to be the core of a pragmatic climate strategy.
Three senior House Energy and Commerce Republicans - Ranking member Greg Walden (R-Ore.), Environment Subcommittee ranking member John Shimkus (R-Ill.) and Energy Subcommittee ranking member Fred Upton (R-Mich.) - followed up on a hearing in the panel last week with a Feb. 13 op-ed in RealClearPolicy calling for greater deployment of carbon capture and utilization, hydropower and nuclear power, as well as investment in clean energy technologies and energy storage to combat climate change.
"We must address climate change in ways that focus on American prosperity and technological capabilities while maintaining America’s leadership in clean and renewable energy innovation," they wrote. "Let’s harness our great American ingenuity to develop new tools that we can market to the world, as we’ve done before."
In a Feb. 13 hearing in the House Science Committee, panel ranking member Frank Lucas (R-Okla.) echoed that he wants “realistic, technology-driven solutions” to climate change, rather than “pie-in-the-sky policies that demand 100% renewable energy at the expense of reliable power from nuclear and fossil fuels and raise energy prices for businesses and consumers."


Similarly, the House energy panel Republicans called the Green New Deal “a policy of regulation, taxation, and ultimately, economic stagnation." They add, “Americans deserve better. That’s why we back sensible, realistic, and effective policies to tackle climate change.”
Some see opportunity with the heightened focus on climate change brought on by the Green New Deal debate. Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) has a new white paper touting natural gas as a “pro-jobs approach to lowering greenhouse gas emissions.” Senate Energy and Natural Resources Chairman Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) said the Green New Deal push could provide an opportunity to revive a comprehensive energy bill she co-authored last Congress, while stressing any climate deal has to include nuclear power.
ClearPath Executive Director Rich Powell took to the BBC World Service airwaves this week to debate Cornell Professor Robert Hockett, who is an adviser to Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) and defender of the Green New Deal. The resolution from Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) is not “viewed as a real climate policy proposal,” Rich argued. Serious climate policies must pass three big tests - technical feasibility, political realism and global impact. “And as I read this messaging proposal, I don’t see how it passes those three hurdles,” Rich said.
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