16 members of the US Climate Action Partnership (US-CAP), including WRI, sent this letter to Congress and the incoming Obama Administration last week.
Download PDF (46 Kb)
Alcoa ● The Dow Chemical Company ● Duke Energy ● DuPont ● Environmental Defense Fund ● FPL Group, Inc. ● General Electric ● General Motors ● NRG Energy, Inc. ● Pew Center on Global Climate Change ● PG&E Corporation ● PNM Resources ● Rio Tinto ● Siemens Corporation ● The Nature Conservancy ● World Resources Institute
December 24, 2008
Dear Senator:
The United States faces an urgent need to transform our economy, make the country more energy secure, and take meaningful action to slow, stop and reverse emissions of greenhouse gases. We believe that a financial stimulus package currently being discussed by President- Elect Obama and the U.S. Congress is urgently needed and can offer a critical boost to restoring the financial health of our economy while also addressing our need for climate protection. A well crafted stimulus package can simultaneously advance President-Elect Obama’s stated climate and economic goals for our nation.
We cannot overstate the importance, however, of choosing the right investments: those that are fast, fair and that build future value.
Our economy needs a package that sets the nation on a new course immediately to deliver economic and climate results, provide benefits to all, and prepare us for the next generation of technological competitiveness. As members of USCAP, we recommend prompt action on policies to:
- promote energy efficiency in buildings and homes,
- modernize the nation’s electric grid, making it “smarter” and allowing it to facilitate new, more efficient technologies and renewable energy,
- stimulate a variety of low-carbon sources of electricity including extending the production tax credit for renewable energy,
- demonstrate and deploy carbon capture and storage for coal-fired power plants and other large stationary sources,
- encourage greater use of less carbon-intensive forms of transportation and fuel, and
- improve the efficiency of our transportation system.
Jennifer Layke, Deputy Director, Climate and Energy ProgramJennifer Layke is Deputy Director, Climate and Energy Program.





