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Newsroom
Green Corps '02 graduate Roger Smith helps coalition pass the Connecticut Global Warming Solutions Act
05/05/2008 Environmental Groups and Legislators Applaud
Passage of Connecticut Global Warming Solutions
Act Historic legislation creates mandatory pollution caps HARTFORD - Leading Connecticut environmental organizations joined legislators in celebrating the final passage in the Senate of An Act Concerning Connecticut Global Warming Solutions (HB 5600) today. The bill caps emissions of global warming pollution and requires emissions cuts to 10% below 1990 levels by 2020 and 80% emissions reductions from 2001 levels by 2050. The bill passed out of the House of Representatives on April 28th 131 to 16 and passed out of the Senate unanimously today. The bill now goes to Governor Rell for her signature. "This bill builds upon the success of the 2004 landmark legislation, An Act Concerning Climate Change which created emissions goals for Connecticut. This bill makes the goals mandatory and requires state agencies to implement the necessary policies and regulations to cut emissions to achieve the needed reductions" said state Senator Ed Meyer. Connecticut is the fifth state after California, New Jersey, Hawaii and Washington, to adopt mandatory limits on global warming pollution. Meanwhile, the United States Congress is beginning debate on federal legislation that builds upon these state actions. Mandatory global warming pollution caps are a response to warnings from the scientific community that emissions cuts are necessary in order to avoid the most dangerous impacts of global warming. The scientific consensus suggests that avoiding those impacts requires cutting emissions 15% to 20% by 2020 and 80% or more by 2050. Senator John McKinney stated "Connecticut has demonstrated leadership in passing this important legislation. If every state decided that it was too small to have an impact on climate change, or that it must wait for others to act, we will fail to address what is one of the gravest threats we face." "Connecticut and the states are setting the bar for Congress as it debates nationwide limits on global warming pollution," said Environment Connecticut Program Director, Christopher Phelps. "While some voices in our nation's capitol push a go-slow approach, state leaders are stepping up and doing what's necessary to begin the task doing what the science tells us is necessary to stop global warming." In addition to mandatory statewide emissions limits, the bill includes provisions directing state agencies to investigate and implement actions to achieve the caps and to begin addressing the impacts of climate change. The legislation:
"We have a moral obligation to adopt responsible environmental policies and be good stewards of our rivers, land, and air. A sustainable future depends upon our ability to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. It is just that clear," said Charles Rothenberger, a staff attorney for Connecticut Fund for the Environment. |