17 House Republicans say climate change is real and its time to fight it
Grist
Seventeen Republican members of Congress from diverse districts including representatives from coastal Southeastern states, Nevada, Utah, upstate New York, and Pennsylvania submitted a resolution in the House Wednesday acknowledging that human activities have had an impact on the global climate and resolving to create and support economically viable mitigation efforts.
The resolution, sponsored by Reps. Carlos Curbelo of Florida, Elise Stefanik of New York, and Ryan Costello of Pennsylvania, is being submitted in the midst of an unprecedented effort by the most anti-science administration in recent American history to remove climate science studies and data from federal agencies.
On Tuesday, Bloomberg reported that President Donald Trump is about to sign an executive order repealing President Barack Obamas Clean Power Plan, and to order a reconsideration of the governments use of the social cost of carbon metric, which measures potential economic damage related to climate change.
Last week, meanwhile, Trumps Environmental Protection Agency administator, Scott Pruitt, suggested that carbon emissions have nothing to do with climate change.
Curbelo, whose Miami-area district is already experiencing dramatic effects of rising sea levels, has been spearheading the effort to gather pro-science members on his side of the aisle since last year, when he coaxed 10 Republicans to join a bipartisan Climate Solutions Caucus, which now has 30 members from 13 states, half of whom are Republican.