Here in Washington state, climate change is on the ballot. If
Initiative 1631 passes in November, it will create a fee on emissions
that cause climate change, with the goal of boosting the effort to stop
the planet from getting disastrously warm.
You may be skeptical about this idea. I know I was. How can
one state
make a difference on a global problem like climate change? And unlike
some supporters of the initiative, I am not interested in attacking the
companies that provide the affordable, reliable energy that keeps our
houses warm, our cars on the road, and our economy humming.
But I overcame my doubts. I support 1631. I will contribute to the Yes on 1631 campaign, I will vote yes when I fill out my ballot, and I am encouraging others to do the same.
It’s important to remember what is at stake. Climate change may be
the toughest problem humanity has ever faced. To avoid the worst
scenarios, we need to reduce global net greenhouse gas emissions to
essentially zero in the next 50 years. Changing how we power our homes
and cars won’t be enough. We also need to get to zero in every other
major source of greenhouse gases, including manufacturing,
transportation, and agriculture.
It’s a huge challenge, but it is solvable. We’ll need technological
breakthroughs that let us run the economy—grow food, make things, move
people and goods, and so on—without emitting greenhouse gases.
I am involved with a private fund, Breakthrough Energy Ventures, that is investing more than $1 billion to help entrepreneurs start new companies that will develop those breakthroughs.
But with a challenge this big and this urgent, startups need more
than funding. Entrepreneurs also need new market structures that will
create incentives to bring innovations out of the lab and into the
market. That’s where 1631 comes in.
There are three reasons I’m in favor of this initiative.
First, passing 1631 would help Washington become a hub for innovative
work on clean energy and climate. If you want to be an innovator in
this field—whether you want to do academic research, start a company, or
both—you will want to do it here. That’s good for everyone in the state
and ultimately will foster the companies and industries that will
create tens of thousands of jobs in Washington.
Can innovators in our state solve this global problem on their own?
Of course not. But at a time when Congress isn’t focusing on this issue,
states can develop their own ideas and explore what works now. This is
an opportunity for Washington to lead the way.
Second, putting a price on pollution that causes climate change will
create a clear market signal that will help drive adoption of the
renewable sources of energy we can deploy today. Given the scale of the
problem and the fact that we have at best 50 years to solve it, we need
to deploy what we have now—where it’s appropriate—while innovating to
find the technology we need for the future. Today, fossil fuels are
often cheaper than renewable sources. This initiative will help level
the playing field and make renewables more attractive.
Finally, 1631 will help the biggest sources of Washington’s clean
energy today—nuclear power and hydropower—stay competitive. This is
especially important, because nuclear and hydro are cheap and reliable
and they don’t contribute to climate change. They will remain part of
our clean-energy mix for the foreseeable future.
It is true that any fee like this may drive up the price of energy.
But 1631 specifically requires that 35 percent of revenues from the fee
will go back to low-income communities hit hard by pollution. Although
that won’t ease the pain for everyone, it is a good step in the right
direction.
If 1631 passes, it will create the first fee of its kind in the
United States. Going first is never easy, but Washington has a history
of pioneering new ideas. And because of all the benefits—shoring up
nuclear and hydropower, enhancing the state’s role as a leader in
innovation, and most of all accelerating progress on climate-change
solutions—I believe it will be worth it. I am going to vote for it and,
if you are eligible, hope you will too.
- By Bill Gates
Article first published on Gatesnotes
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