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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
3.04.2008 - 01:45pm ET
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CSR News from:
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Fraser Communications
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Next President Will Have Ample Authority to Act on Climate Change, New Study Finds
(CSRwire) DENVER, CO -- (MARKET WIRE) -- 03/04/08 -- With the science community
calling for urgent action on global climate change, the next President of
the United States need not wait for Congress. According to a study
commissioned by the Presidential Climate Action Project, the chief
executive has substantial authority to act immediately.
"The Boundaries of Executive Authority: Using Executive Orders to
Implement Federal Climate Change Policy" reviews presidential actions from
1937 to the present. The authors, including Alaine Ginocchio and Kevin
Doran of the Center for Energy & Environmental Security at the University
of Colorado School of Law, found "significant authority, without further
action by Congress, for the President to... implement various aspects of
climate change policy."
The report analyzes the potential for the president to use executive
orders, presidential directives, executive agreements, the budget process
and the bully pulpit to jump-start federal leadership on climate change
with authority already granted by Congress, the Constitution and the
Courts.
While action implemented under executive authority can be revoked by a
succeeding president, the authors noted that "a proactive administration
with an understanding of the serious implications of climate change can
make a significant impact immediately upon taking office."
Measures the president could implement under executive authority
include:
-- A cap-and-trade system for carbon emissions;
-- Limits on greenhouse gas emissions for the nation's largest energy
consumer, the federal government;
-- Specific targets for federal agencies to reduce their greenhouse gas
emissions;
-- A program to use the federal procurement system to create a vast new
market for climate-friendly goods and services;
-- Agreements with other nations to further international collaboration
on climate action, and;
-- New national goals and timetables for improving energy efficiency,
increasing the use of renewable energy resources, reducing petroleum
consumption and implementing other climate-critical actions.
The full study can be found at:
http://www.climateactionproject.com/docs/CEES_PCAP_Report_Final_Feb_08.pdf
The Presidential Climate Action Project is a nonpartisan initiative of the
Wirth Chair at the University of Colorado Denver School of Public Affairs.
The project, which is advised by a coalition of climate scientists and
policy experts, released a preliminary action plan last December proposing
more than 300 presidential actions that could be initiated within 100 days
of taking office.
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