Five Recent Senate Bills Set Mandatory Greenhouse Gas Caps:
Side-by-Side Comparison and Analysis
The current Congress has its hands full with many high priority issues, but for the first time climate change is one of them. Four bills setting mandatory caps on economy-wide greenhouse gas emission are under active discussion in the U.S. Senate, along with narrower bill that restrict emissions from the electricity and automobile sectors. | |||||
While the bills have much in common, they vary with respect to the stringency of the caps and the chosen regulatory approaches. Differences in stringency and the regulatory approach can be expected to have significant effects on the cost of the programs and the distribution of those costs across households and businesses.
Senior Fellows Ray Kopp and Billy Pizer of RFF's Climate and Technology Policy Program have prepared a side-by-side comparative analysis of the five most recent Senate bills: Sanders-Boxer, Kerry-Snowe, McCain-Lieberman, Feinstein-Carper, and Bingaman-Specter. |
Summary of Climate Change Bills Introduced As of February 16, 2007 |
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The analysis is contained in a table that compares 10 attributes.
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The side-by-side table is accompanied by a narrative discussion of the important differences in bills. The narrative addresses six questions. | |||||
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Five Recent Senate Bills Propose Mandatory Greenhouse Gas Caps: Side-by-Side Comparison and Analysis |