“We’re
just eight days from having a federal government controlled by climate
deniers. Governor Cuomo must stand up to Trump by being bold and
visionary in our response to
climate change.
In
his State of the State addresses, Governor Cuomo advanced important
efforts to make New York’s electricity grid cleaner, healthier, and more
reliable, particularly with
his commitment to offshore wind energy. But he knows that power plants
represent just 20% of New York’s greenhouse gas emissions. We heard
nothing about the other major economic sectors driving climate change,
like transportation and buildings.
Governor
Cuomo also highlighted that New York will undertake a study on creating
a path to 100% clean renewable energy, something the state already did –
in 2010. However,
plans alone are not enough. Visions need to be made enforceable with
laws that hold our government accountable if concrete targets are not
met.
In
the era of Trump, the health and safety of New Yorkers depends on
Governor Cuomo going further. Governor Cuomo needs to rise to the
occasion and be a national leader on
climate, equity and creation of good jobs. And he needs to ensure that
his words are more than empty promises.
How?
Start by including the Climate and Community Protection Act (CCPA) in
his written budget proposal. The CCPA sets specific greenhouse gas
reduction targets and provides
a means to hold government accountable for meeting those targets. The
CCPA passed the state Assembly last year and has strong support in both
houses of the Legislature this year.
The
CCPA tackles climate pollution in all sectors, while getting frontline
communities the resources they need to weather the climate storm, and
instituting key labor protections
that will ensure good, family-supporting jobs in the renewable energy
economy.
We
need legislation that puts New York on an enforceable path to 100%
clean energy in all sectors, not just electricity generation. We call on
Governor Cuomo to be the climate
leader our nation desperately needs at this time by enacting the CCPA
in 2017.”
Source: Environmental Advocates of New York
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