Senators to unveil carbon tax bill to generate $2.5 trillion in 10 years
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[July 25, 2019]
By Timothy Gardner
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Two Democratic U.S.
senators will unveil a bill on Thursday to curb climate change by
slapping a fee on oil, natural gas and coal and delivering most of the
revenues to low- and middle-income Americans, one of the lawmakers said.
Senator Chris Coons said on Wednesday he and Senator Dianne Feinstein
will introduce the Climate Action Rebate Act, which aims to generate
$2.5 trillion in revenues over 10 years starting in 2020. It would
rebate about 70 percent of the money to families that make less than
$130,000 per year, and use the rest for energy infrastructure, job
retraining for fossil fuel workers, and research and development.
President Donald Trump, a Republican, rejects climate science and has
slashed regulations on oil and gas drillers and coal miners. That has
made climate a big issue in the race for the 2020 Democratic
presidential nomination, although none of the senators running have yet
signed onto the Coons carbon tax bill.
Coons said he is talking with Senate colleagues from both parties and
Democrats running for president to build support. It will be an uphill
battle to get enough votes to pass in the Republican-led 100-member
chamber.
The Green New Deal, a plan to tackle climate change backed by
left-leaning Democrats including Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
and Senator Ed Markey, has grabbed the attention of many
environmentalists with an aggressive goal of cutting carbon emissions to
net zero by 2030. But wind and solar power companies have criticized it
as unrealistic and politically divisive.
Coons, a centrist, hopes his bill will channel much of the enthusiasm
for the Green New Deal into practical solutions. The bill is a "serious
legislative attempt at taking bold vision and turning it into a
specific, enactable, concrete strategy," he said.
The idea of a carbon tax, which aims to level the playing field for
emissions-free energy, like solar and wind power, by adding costs to
fossil fuels, has been embraced by a wide range of economists from
conservatives to liberals.
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Wind turbines generate power at the Loraine Windpark Project in
Loraine, Texas U.S. August 24, 2018. REUTERS/Nick Oxford/File Photo
The Coons bill would cut U.S. carbon emissions 55% by 2030 and 100%
by 2050 compared to 2017 levels, a more modest goal than that of the
Green New Deal.
A carbon tax is also supported by number of senior Republicans
including former Secretaries of State James Baker and George Shultz.
Stephen O'Hanlon, a spokesman for the Sunrise Movement, a youth
coalition that helped put the Green New Deal in the media spotlight,
said a carbon tax can be part of the solution, but more massive
changes are needed to get the energy system off fossil fuels.
A Marist Poll this month showed 63 percent of Americans believed
that the Green New Deal was a good idea, versus 50 percent who
thought a carbon tax was.
"Any politician serious about passing climate action on the scale we
need has got to take note," of the support for more aggressive
action, O'Hanlon said.
Last year Coons introduced a carbon tax bill with Republican Senator
Jeff Flake, who has since retired.
A companion carbon tax bill will be introduced in the Democratic-led
House of Representatives on Thursday.
(Reporting by Timothy Gardner; Editing by David Gregorio)
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