Climate Policy Center
About CPC

CPC Current Priorities

In 2009, CPC is pursuing research and education focused in the following five areas:

1. Designing a Cost-effective Cap and Trade System

CPC continues to focus on the architecture of a cap and trade system. One issue that will help determine the effectiveness of any cap and trade system is how such a plan would allocate emission allowances. A workable and equitable allowance allocation plan is an essential component of a cap and trade system's architecture. CPC is working with Congress, economists and policy experts to encourage an optimal design that will enhance and maximize the use of the allocation system to solve the climate problem. CPC believes that research of this type along with targeted outreach and educational activities to Congress, leading academics, and various stakeholders will significantly increase the chance of enactment of an ambitious and practical emissions reduction program.

2. Strengthening U.S Climate-Energy Research and Development

CPC has been instrumental in advancing the creation of the Advanced Projects Research Agency-Energy, or ARPA-E, charged with leading U.S. R&D efforts to develop transformative climate and energy technologies capable of meeting future climate and energy challenges. CPC played a significant role in interesting Congress in the potential of such an approach to energy R&D, and was one of the few organizations that initially raised the idea of creating an ARPA-E with key members of both the House and Senate. President Barack Obama announced the creation of ARPA-E on April 27, 2009. CPC’s goal is to ensure that the R&D issue continues to be a major component of energy and climate discussions.

3. Designing a National Approach to Adaptation

In many places, climate change already is being felt; there is no longer much doubt that it will require societies to adapt to a range of impacts. CPC believes that it is possible to address existing and projected impacts in a way that expands the consensus for national and global emissions reduction efforts, by identifying and clearly articulating the policy and strategic linkages between society’s needs for adaptation and the broader need for emissions reduction. CPC is working with Congressional leaders, including House Natural Resources Chairman, Nick J. Rahall (D-WV), to establish a framework for federal natural resource agencies, such as the National Park Service, to assess impacts of climate change on our natural resources and to develop appropriate responses.

4. Raising Climate Change's Presidential Profile

Through CPC's work in New Hampshire leading up to the first in the nation primary, and work with both presidential campaigns during the election season, climate change initiatives were part of the new administration's action plan for the first 100 days in office. CPC’s strategy focused on (1) obtaining a commitment to early action from all presidential candidates; (2) outlining the elements of a comprehensive climate initiative to be launched in the 150 days following the presidential election; and (3) developing a detailed early action plan that can support such an initiative.

Action in Congress during the first half of 2009 promises new legislation capping greenhouse gas emissions. Read the recommendations CPC made to the incoming Obama administration.

5. The Arctic Initiative

polar bearThe Circumpolar Arctic has emerged as the region of the Earth already hardest hit by climate change. Warming in the Arctic is proceeding rapidly – faster, in fact, than the global circulation models had predicted. CPC is working with this situation in two ways: by a) 'buying time" – partnering with the Clean Air Task Force to explore the possibility that the control of various short-term pollutants could allow us to retard the rate of warming in the region; and b) working with the Aspen Institute and the eight Arctic governments to consider cooperative efforts to manage the impacts of Arctic warming and to develop a new approach to sustainable development in this rapidly changing region. For more information about the Arctic, please visit Our Arctic Website.