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For Immediate Release:
2007-08-01
For More Information:
J.R. Tolbert (434) 202-8373

Environment America Commends Senators Lieberman And Warner, But Says Bill Needs Work To Meet Global Warming Challenge

Environment America is the new home of U.S. PIRG’s environmental work.

Statement of Emily Figdor, U.S. PIRG Federal Global Warming Program Director

The draft bill unveiled today by Senators Lieberman (Conn.) and Warner (Va.) is an encouraging starting point for Senate action on global warming.  We commend the senators for their achievement.  However, significant changes will need to be made for the bill to provide the strong, science-based solution to global warming that Americans are seeking. 

One major problem is that the bill would not reduce global warming pollution as quickly or as deeply – especially in the next 10 years – as the science indicates is needed to avoid the worst effects of global warming.  Since the bill only covers about 80% of total U.S. global warming emissions, claims that the bill would reduce our emissions by 70% by 2050 do not tell the whole story.

We look forward to working with the senators and other members of the committee to craft a strong response to global warming that Americans can be proud of. 

The science demands decisive action to protect our environment, our economy, and future generations from global warming.  We can’t settle for less.

For a comparison of the emission-reduction levels in the draft bill compared with those in the Sanders-Boxer Global Warming Pollution Reduction Act (S. 309), which has 21 cosponsors, see the chart below.

Year

Change in total U.S. emissions from 1990 levels under Sanders-Boxer bill (S. 309)

Change in total U.S. emissions from 1990 levels under Lieberman-Warner draft bill*

Change in total U.S. emissions from current (2005) levels under Sanders-Boxer bill (S. 309)

Change in total U.S. emissions from current (2005) levels under Lieberman-Warner draft bill*

2020

0

+8%

-15%

-8%

2030

-27%

-11%

-38%

-24%

2040

-67%

-30%

-72%

-40%

2050

-80%

-48%

-83%

-56%

 

*Draft bill covers roughly 79% of total U.S. global warming emissions; chart assumes that emissions from non-covered sectors remain flat over time, which is an optimistic assumption given that EIA projects that emissions from these sources will grow.

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U.S. PIRG is the federation of state Public Interest Research Groups. State PIRGs are non-profit, non-partisan public interest advocacy organizations.