New York: A leader in the fight against global warming

For more than a decade, New York has been at the forefront of national efforts to shift to clean energy and to reduce pollution that contributes to global warming.  

By adopting strong policies, including a cap on the state’s global warming emissions, clean cars standards, renewable energy standards, strong energy efficiency programs, and tough emission standards for power plants, our state has shown that taking action to reduce global warming pollution can work. 

The Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative is a global warming program that works

In 2005, New York officials joined with Connecticut, Delaware, and other states in the Northeast to establish one of the most important global warming reduction programs in America — the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI). 

RGGI has broken important ground. It’s the first program in the United States to limit global warming emissions from power plants, make polluters pay for permits to emit carbon and invest the revenues in energy efficiency and clean energy initiatives. Even more importantly, RGGI is a model for the country. It has demonstrated that other states, other regions, and the nation as a whole could use a similar model to reduce emissions. 

RGGI has been a tremendous success. New York has already invested nearly $238 million dollars of RGGI revenues in programs that improve energy efficiency and accelerate the development of cleaner energy sources.  RGGI has also contributed 4,620 new jobs and $326 million in economic growth in our state.

New York must hold the line since RGGI is under attack in Maine, New Hampshire and New Jersey.

Fossil fuel interests, led by Americans for Prosperity and other anti-regulatory ideologues, emboldened by the 2010 elections and the tough economy, have convinced their allies in several states to support killing RGGI.  As a result, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, the New Hampshire House of Representatives and Maine’s Governor Le Page have all announced their opposition to RGGI, and have attempted to kill or weaken the program. Backsliding on this precedent-setting policy would have serious repercussions in the overall debate on the response to global warming. 

RGGI is only as effective as the participating states allow it to be. That’s why it’s so important for New York to hold the line by actively supporting RGGI and making it even stronger in our state.

Fortunately, there is strong public support in New York for reducing pollution from power plants and shifting to clean energy.  Environment New York staff are working with a suite of partners to convince state officials that RGGI is critical to New York’s efforts to meet our energy and environmental goals.   

With your support, we can strengthen RGGI and cut global warming pollution

In December, we worked with our allies to sign on 250 environmental groups, clean energy businesses, and public health officials to a set of principles to strengthen the program. We presented these principles to the top energy and environmental officials in the other Northeast states in RGGI.

In January, New York officials joined officials from Rhode Island, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Vermont in announcing their intention to begin the process of strengthening the RGGI emissions cap.  

We’re making progress — but we need your support to defend and strengthen RGGI. Join our campaign today, and urge Gov. Cuomo to strengthen RGGI so we can expand New York’s efforts to reduce global warming pollution from power plants and shift to clean energy.



Global Warming Updates

News Release | Environment New York

Obama Admin. Finalizes Historic Clean Car Standards

Today the Obama administration finalized new clean car standards that will double the fuel efficiency of today’s vehicles by 2025, drastically reducing emissions of carbon pollution and cutting oil use in New York and nationwide. The standards will cover new cars and light trucks in model years 2017-2025, and require those vehicles to meet the equivalent of a 54.5 miles-per-gallon standard by 2025. A recent joint analysis by the Natural Resources Defense Council and Union of Concerned Scientists projects that by 2030 in New York alone, the standards will cut carbon pollution from vehicles by more than 12 million metric tons—the equivalent of the annual pollution of 1.8 million of today’s vehicles—and save more than one billion gallons of fuel annually.

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Headline

Coalition Pushes Cuomo, Others, on Greenhouse-Gas Cap

A coalition of environmentalists, renewable energy advocates, elected officials and national groups released a letter today that was delivered to Gov. Andrew Cuomo, calling on him to back changes to a regional cap-and-trade program for greenhouse-gas emissions.

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Calls to Strengthen Regional Emissions Coalition

More than 50 New York organizations and individuals delivered a letter to Governor Cuomo this week calling on him to strengthen the multi-state coalition that reduces greenhouse gas emissions.

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News Release | Environment New York

Businesses, Consumer, Energy & Environment Groups, & Elected Officials Call on Gov Cuomo to Build on Regional Climate Effort’s Success

Fifty-seven New York-based groups and elected officials yesterday delivered a letter to Governor Andrew Cuomo calling on him to strengthen the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (nicknamed “RGGI”), the precedent-setting multi-state effort to reduce climate pollution from power plants. The signatories, which represent the business, consumer, energy, environment and health communities, were joined by more than 250 regional, national and other state groups in the RGGI region signaling their support for the nation’s first enforceable effort to cut the pollution that is changing our climate. With record high temperatures and droughts plaguing much of the nation, the impacts of climate change are becoming more prevalent. It is clear that we have no time to waste; we must strengthen RGGI now.

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Extreme weather linked to climate change

Environment New York's Eric Whalen joins the Richard French Live Show to talk about the link between recent extreme weather events and global warming.

Watch the interview here.

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