By Adam Aton

President Obama’s climate czar told lawmakers yesterday to embrace the “Green New Deal,” and she later suggested they start by codifying the Obama regulations that President Trump is trying to undo.

“We’re not starting this on a completely empty slate,” said Carol Browner, who also served as President Clinton’s EPA administrator.

Browner helped guide Obama’s regulations on emissions from cars and other sources as Senate Democrats failed to pass carbon cap-and-trade legislation in 2010. That allowed Obama to sidestep Congress but left his policies vulnerable to the Trump administration, which is rolling back all his major climate regulations.

Drawing from those experiences, Browner outlined a path that pairs legislative backstops with more presidential authority.

“We tried to get a carbon bill. We were not successful, but we looked at our existing laws and we found lots of ways to actually reduce [greenhouse gases]. So maybe go back and codify what Obama’s done, right?” she said after testifying at a congressional hearing on oceans and climate change.

Browner’s remarks came a few hours after lawmakers unveiled their resolution for the “Green New Deal,” which aims to mobilize a massive jobs program to decarbonize the economy while strengthening the social safety net. That’s a more ambitious undertaking than Obama’s Clean Power Plan or corporate average fuel economy standards — but Browner said the details shouldn’t scare off lawmakers concerned about the climate.

“Let’s just take a moment to, like, say this is a good thing. This is a big challenge, and it deserves a big response. A lot of the details we’ll need to work through and sort out, but today’s a good day. We took a big step forward. And it’s only through aspiration and vision that we make progress, so I’m excited,” she said.

The backers of the “Green New Deal” aren’t taking that kind of Democratic support for granted. It’s gotten a lukewarm reception from powerful lawmakers, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) (Greenwire, Feb. 7).

And Michael Greenstone, who was an Obama economic adviser, told NPR that market mechanisms like a carbon tax would work better to reduce emissions than government intervention.

Continue reading at E&E News…

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Areas of Focus: Climate Change
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Climate Change
Climate change is an urgent global challenge. EPIC research is helping to assess its impacts, quantify its costs, and identify an efficient set of policies to reduce emissions and adapt...
Climate Economics
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Climate Economics
Climate change will affect every sector of the economy, both locally and globally. EPIC research is quantifying these effects to help guide policymakers, businesses, and individuals working to mitigate and...
Climate Law & Policy
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Climate Law & Policy
As countries around the world implement policies to confront climate change, EPIC research is calculating which policies will have the most impact for the least cost.