SADOW: Legislative Review of Alarmist Plan Welcome

Louisiana’s Climate Initiatives Task Force and its product the Louisiana Climate Action Plan officially died early last year — but a review of its legacy is most appropriate.

In 2020, Democrat former Gov. John Bel Edwards, safely reelected, let his inner radical leftist surface in part by establishing the task force, which received orders to come up with a plan that mirrored the climate alarmism agenda. It duly did so by 2022, fatally flawed by the scientifically unsustainable assumptions behind it, which wanted to commit the state to a traumatic ratcheting down of carbon emissions.



Fortunately, for the most part, the significant portions would require legislative or Public Service Commission acquiescence, and the climate realism majorities in both make that unlikely to happen. However, actions taken by the executive branch, for example, could adhere to minor aspects of the agenda at the expense of taxpayers.

Alternatively, some alarmist items could be implemented in policy, but for different political reasons. For example, the plan endorses carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) as a means of removing carbon from the atmosphere – even though scaling CCS to a level that would make a noticeable dent at all in carbon effluents would costs tens of trillions of dollars. In reality, the push for CCS projects in Louisiana is driven less by belief in climate alarmism than by lucrative federal subsidies. Legislative leaders and the Republican Gov. Jeff Landry administration appear to support these projects primarily as economic development opportunities created by a system of government incentives that picks winners and losers.

As it is, both the task force and its product mercifully were put out of citizens’ miseries by R.S. 49:215, which essentially terminates JBE 2020-18. That law says that a previous governor’s executive orders expire shortly after he leaves office, unless it is renewed by his successor. Still, zombie portions of the agenda could be living on with unknown consequences.

Enter GOP state Rep. Chuck Owen, whose HR 274 that passed the House empanels its Natural Resources and Environment Committee to get some answers. Owen, who understands that no scientifically validated evidence exists to prove that human activities cause significant change in climate, commits the committee to review the plan in his resolution.

This is overdue and welcome. Such a review can illuminate where state government, in law or in policy, acts to follow the plan and whether such actions convey any benefit to the state and its taxpayers. Publicizing these items, perhaps exposing practices few knew about, then invites legislative, executive, and public scrutiny as to whether these really serve the best interests of the state and its citizens.

It may have no impact on some or all of the zombie portions that stagger on depending upon policy-makers’ responses. But in demanding a defense of these, this process can confirm for public consumption the actual worth of these items and which policy-makers will defend them – which is useful information for voters in future elections. By all means this exercise should commence.

Advertisement

Advertisement



Interested in more news from Louisiana? We've got you covered! See More Louisiana News
Previous Article
Next Article

Trending on The Hayride