Texas 2019 - 86th Regular

Texas House Bill HCR15 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 11/12/2018

                            86R615 KSM-D
 By: Raymond H.C.R. No. 15


 CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
 WHEREAS, Climate change is a complex issue with important
 implications for economic stability, national security, and public
 health for future generations of Texans; and
 WHEREAS, In February 2017, the Climate Leadership Council
 released a compelling report outlining the conservative case for
 addressing climate change; the international research and advocacy
 group's members include one of the Lone Star State's most respected
 native sons, former U.S. secretary of state James Baker, as well as
 members of the Ronald Reagan administration and both Bush
 administrations, namely Martin Feldstein and N. Gregory Mankiw,
 former chairs of the President's Council of Economic Advisers,
 Henry M. Paulson Jr., former secretary of the treasury, George
 P. Shultz, former secretary of state, and Thomas Stephenson, former
 ambassador to Portugal and now a partner at Sequoia Capital; the
 organization's other members are Rob Walton, longtime chair of
 Walmart, and Ted Halstead, founder, president, and CEO of the
 Climate Leadership Council and founder of the New America think
 tank; and
 WHEREAS, The council's report states that evidence of climate
 change is too powerful to ignore; although the extent of human
 influence on climate is debated, the risks posed are such that the
 world needs a kind of "insurance policy," the authors warn; climate
 solutions based on sound economic analysis would build prosperity,
 benefit working Americans, reduce regulations, and protect our
 natural heritage; and
 WHEREAS, In the Reagan era, economists conducted a
 cost-benefit analysis to assess the risks of the growing hole in the
 ozone layer, and the president then threw his weight behind a
 landmark treaty, the Montreal Protocol, which implemented a
 pragmatic, market-based solution to the environmental problem;
 Mr. Baker, Mr. Shultz, and the other members of the Climate
 Leadership Council support a similar conservative,
 limited-government approach to climate change, and economists of
 diverse viewpoints today concur that the economic benefits of
 grappling with climate change greatly outweigh the costs; for
 instance, while no single natural disaster can be attributed to
 climate change, it has increased the risk of catastrophic events
 such as Superstorm Sandy and Hurricanes Ike, Rita, Katrina, and
 Harvey; in 2017, the National Centers for Environmental Information
 recorded 16 weather and climate disaster events that each exceeded
 $1 billion in costs, with a cumulative cost of more than $300
 billion; and
 WHEREAS, Many of the nation's leaders have spoken out about
 the need to address climate change, including former vice president
 Al Gore, who said, "Solutions to the climate crisis are within
 reach, but in order to capture them we must take urgent action today
 across every level of society"; former president Barack Obama
 stated that "the shift to a cleaner energy economy won't happen
 overnight, and it will require tough choices along the way. But the
 debate is settled. Climate change is a fact. And when our children's
 children look us in the eye and ask if we did all we could to leave
 them a safer, more stable world, with new sources of energy, I want
 us to be able to say yes, we did"; another former president, Bill
 Clinton, explained that "climate change is more remote than terror
 but a more profound threat to the future of the children and the
 grandchildren and the great-grandchildren I hope all of you
 have. . . . It's the only thing we face today that has the power to
 remove the preconditions of civilized society"; and
 WHEREAS, Climate change will negatively impact agriculture,
 coastal cities, and political stability in already-volatile
 regions of the world, and such developments could imperil our
 American way of life; leaders in Washington, D.C., should
 investigate how best to mitigate the dangers to ensure a stable,
 prosperous future for the generations to come, for as the current
 U.S. secretary of defense, General James Mattis, declared,
 "Climate change is impacting stability in areas of the world where
 our troops are operating today"; now, therefore, be it
 RESOLVED, That the 86th Legislature of the State of Texas
 hereby respectfully urge the United States Congress to conduct a
 cost-benefit analysis regarding the risks of climate change and
 appropriate measures to address those risks; and, be it further
 RESOLVED, That the Texas secretary of state forward official
 copies of this resolution to the president of the United States, to
 the president of the Senate and the speaker of the House of
 Representatives of the United States Congress, and to all the
 members of the Texas delegation to Congress with the request that
 this resolution be entered in the Congressional Record as a
 memorial to the Congress of the United States of America.