Candidates and Climate Change: Why It Matters
People love to talk about the weather, especially when it's strange
like the mercifully ended summer of 2012. This year the nation's weather
has been hotter and more extreme than ever, federal records show. Yet
there are two people who aren't talking about it, and they both happen
to be running for president.
Where they stand
In 2009, President Barack Obama proposed a bill
that would have capped power plant carbon dioxide emissions and allowed
trading of credits for the right to emit greenhouse gases, but the
measure died in Congress. An international treaty effort failed. Obama
since has taken a different approach, treating carbon dioxide as a
pollutant under the law. He doubled auto fuel economy standards, which
will increase the cost of cars but save drivers money at the pump. He's
put billions of stimulus dollars into cleaner energy.
Mitt Romney's view of climate change has varied. In his book No Apology,
he wrote, "I believe that climate change is occurring" and "human
activity is a contributing factor." But on the campaign trail last year
he said, "We don't know what's causing climate change on this planet."
He has criticized Obama's treatment of coal power plants and opposes
treating carbon dioxide as a pollutant and the capping of carbon dioxide
emissions, but favors spending money on clean technology. Romney says
some actions to curb emissions could hurt an already struggling economy.
Candidates and Climate Change: Why It Matters
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