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DANIEL HOHERD
How we can win: the promise of progress

2015 is shaping up to be a year of potentially significant progress on climate change and clean energy. Globally, all eyes will be on the next round of international climate negotiations scheduled for Paris in December. Buoyed by the major climate agreement inked by the United States and China at the end of 2014, the Paris talks could serve to catalyze additional action commitments among nations, and from major corporate players looking to take a leadership role to stop global warming.

Nationally, the biggest play is likely to be President Obama’s Clean Power Plan. If approved in something close to its current form, the president’s plan will be one of the most significant policies on climate in our nation’s history, and will take a big bite out of carbon pollution from existing coal-fired power plants. 

But much of the action on climate and clean energy will happen in the states and regions.   Nowhere in the country is the promise of action greater than on the West Coast. For the first time in many years, climate change and growing the clean energy economy are at the top of the agenda of elected leaders. 

At the very end of 2014 Washington Governor Jay Inslee announced an ambitious proposal to hold major polluters accountable by capping global warming pollution. Just as significant as his announcement were the leaders from businesses, labor unions, communities of color, and the legislature that flanked him. To win, we need to broaden the movement and to bring more voices and constituencies to the table to show that diverse engagement demonstrates that there is a broad coalition forming to call for jobs, clean energy, and climate action.  

In Oregon, Governor John Kitzhaber has made passage of a Clean Fuels Standard one of his top priorities, and with the outcome of the election the Oregon Legislature should have the votes to move forward. If passed, this bill will allow Oregon to move forward with advancing clean fuel choices at the pump for consumers, clean our air, and reduce carbon pollution. 

Further south, California Governor Jerry Brown used the occasion of his fourth and final inauguration to highlight climate change. He announced extremely ambitious goals for his state, including seeking to reduce petroleum use in cars by as much as 50 percent within 15 years, and increasing to one-half from one-third the portion of electricity California derives from renewable sources.

Here at Climate Solutions, we are laser-focused on our top three priorities:

  1. Winning landmark climate policies in Washington and Oregon to create a West Coast climate leadership bloc stretching from California to British Columbia that results in substantial emission reductions. Our policy priorities are limiting climate pollution through capping and pricing carbon, decarbonizing the main energy sectors with coal-to-clean-energy commitments, and implementing Clean Fuels Standards.
  2. Creating replicable models for reducing and storing carbon that demonstrate the pathways to a low-carbon future with substantially reduced emissions.
  3. Stopping all proposed coal exports from the Northwest. 

We, along with many allies, are off to a furious start this year. Some major strides of the first few weeks of January include:

  • The Lummi tribe submitted their formal opposition to the proposed coal export facility at Cherry Point north of Bellingham, WA -- perhaps putting the final nail in that project’s coffin. The Lummi have long opposed this proposal, but they have now taken a formal stand invoking their treaty rights, which is a huge legal hammer and a significant action by their leadership (please look for a separate email on Monday for needed action to support them).
  • The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality adopted formal rules on a Clean Fuels Standard, something that we have been working on for many years. This sets the stage for the expected passage of a Clean Fuels bill early in the 2015 session in Oregon.
  • A series of great opinion-editorials have been published, including: The Oregonian printed an op-ed by our Oregon Director Kristen Sheeran on climate policy for the upcoming legislative session; and The Seattle Times printed a great op-ed authored by Howard Frumkin with the UW, Renee Klein with American Lung Association, and Craig Kenworthy with the Puget Sound Clean Air Agency calling for a Clean Fuels Standard in Washington State.
  • The King County Cities Climate Collaboration (K4C) Summit convened, bringing together King County Executive Dow Constantine and the senior elected officials representing the majority of the county’s population. They agreed to tough new goals for reducing carbon, and continued along the path that our New Energy Cities team has been pioneering with them for the past year or so.

Success in the coming year is far from assured. Gridlock in state legislatures remains a huge roadblock, as does the political might of the oil and coal industries.

But the table is set, with more voices present than ever before, for major progress in the coming year. If the first few weeks are any indication, 2015 could be bright indeed.

Author Bio

Gregg Small
Gregg Small

Executive Director, Climate Solutions

Gregg brings nearly 30 years of experience working on climate, environmental, and public policy issues, including 25 as an Executive Director. At Climate Solutions, Gregg oversees a staff of more than two dozen policy experts, campaigners, innovators, and researchers across Washington and Oregon, providing strategic direction for one of the most effective regional climate and clean economy organizations in the nation. Under his leadership, Climate Solutions and our many allies have successfully passed some of the best climate policies in the United States. 

Prior to coming to Climate Solutions, Gregg served as the Executive Director of the Washington Toxics Coalition for 7 years and as the Executive Director of the California-based Pesticide Watch for 5 years. During that time, he played a leadership role in creating and developing a number of leading coalitions working on environmental health issues, including the Toxic Free Legacy Coalition,Californians for Pesticide Reform, and Safer Chemicals, Healthy Bodies. At Climate Solutions, he helped to found the Washington-based Alliance for Jobs and Clean Energy and Renew Oregon.

Gregg began his professional career as an organizer for Green Corps, working in Washington, DC, Vermont, and California. He received his B.A. in Political Science from Dickinson College.

When not at work, Gregg spends time with his family and raising awareness about Cystic Fibrosis, a genetic disease that his son Jude has and that he is passionate about finding a cure for.