The House bill was sponsored by Representatives
Fred Upton (
R–6th
MI) and
Ed Whitfield (
R–1st
KY). The bill was introduced on March 3, 2011. An identically worded bill was authored and introduced into the
United States Senate by Senator
Jim Inhofe (
R–
OK) and cosponsored by Senators
Thad Cochran and
Roger Wicker (
R–
MS) and
Marco Rubio (
R–
FL). On March 8, 2011, in a hearing before the
Subcommittee on Energy of the
House Committee on Energy and Commerce, Democratic Congressmen presented five eminent academic climatologists who defended the
scientific consensus that
global warming is largely the result of
human activities like the burning of
fossil fuels. Republican Congressmen presented two witnesses who said that the reasons for global warming were unclear. On March 10 the Act advanced out of the subcommittee on a voice vote. On March 15 the Act advanced out of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce on a 34 to 19 vote. All Republican committee members voted in favor, along with three Democrats:
John Barrow (
D–12th
GA),
Jim Matheson (
D–2nd
UT), and
Mike Ross (
D–4th
AR). On March 30 the
Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released a cost estimate that said “enacting this legislation would save $57 million in 2012 and about $250 million over the 2012-2016 period, assuming that appropriations in those years were reduced accordingly.” This savings is calculated by taking into consideration the amount of money spent by the EPA in its effort to regulate GHG emissions. However, “Republicans on the committee's Energy and Power Subcommittee argued that trying to limit carbon emissions would cost US businesses $300-400 billion/year and discourage hiring of new employees.” In response to this,
Lisa P. Jackson, the acting Administrator for the EPA, argued that the EPA's implementation of the Clean Air Act has stimulated the US environmental technologies industry has led to an increase in revenue. "In 2008, that industry generated nearly $300 billion in revenue and $44 billion in exports.” The saving reported here are mainly due to the estimated reduction of early deaths caused by pollution. These findings are based upon already observed trends. On April 5 US President
Barack Obama said he would veto any bill that prevented the EPA from regulating greenhouse gases. On April 6 in House floor debate Upton summarized his intentions for introducing this bill saying, "The only environmental impact may be to ship our jobs to countries with no environmental protections at all, so, ... at the end of the day the EPA climate regime is all economic pain and no environmental gain."
Henry Waxman (
D–4th
CA),
Ranking Member in the House Committee on Energy and Commerce said "...climate change is real. It is caused by pollution, and it is a serious threat to our health and welfare. We need to confront these realities, not put our heads in the sands." On April 7, 2011, the bill passed the
House by a vote of 255 to 172. No
Republican opposed it; 19
Democrats supported it. The next day it was received by the Senate and referred to the Committee on Environment and Public Works. The bill died with the ending of the two-year Congressional session, in January 2013. ==References==