Climate Stewardship Acts

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The Climate Stewardship Acts are a series of three acts introduced to the United States Senate by Senator John McCain (R-AZ) and Senator Joseph Lieberman (ID-CT), with a number of other co-sponsors. Their aim was to introduce a mandatory cap and trade system for greenhouse gases, as a response to the threat of anthropogenic climate change. All three acts failed to gain enough votes to pass through the senate.

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[edit] 2003 Climate Stewardship Act

The first Act (S. 139, H.R. 4067) was defeated in the U.S. Senate by 55 votes to 43.[1]

If passed, it would have capped 2010 CO2 emissions at the 2000 level. Residential and agricultural areas, as well as other areas deemed "not feasible", would be exempt. As such, approximately 85% of the United State's emissions would have been covered for the year 2000. The bill would have also established a scholarship at the National Academy of Sciences for those studying climatology.[1]

[edit] 2005 Climate Stewardship and Innovation Act

Under a slightly modified title, but with similar provisions, the Act (S. 1151) was reintroduced to a new Congress. The Act now called for the federal government to play a lead role in researching and commercialising new energy technologies, and particularly nuclear plant designs. [2] Republicans opposed the Bill 49-6, while Democrats supported it 37-10.[3]

[edit] 2007 Climate Stewardship and Innovation Act

The substantional strengthening of this Act (S. 208) involved the provision for the emissions cap, immobile in previous Acts, to be gradually reduced, following the theory of contraction and convergence. It was co-sponsored by Barack Obama (D-IL) and also received endorsements from the National Wildlife Federation, Environmental Defense, and the Pew Center on Global Climate Change.[4]

Reductions in emissions under the Act would be to 2004 levels by 2012, 1990 levels by 2020, and 60% below 1990 by 2050.[2] The 60% target is the level posited for the forthcoming UK Climate Change Bill.


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