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Florida at a climate crossroads: Can the PROVE IT Act offer a solution? 

The PROVE IT Act is an innovative piece of legislation that could help Florida industries emerge as leaders in carbon efficiency

by Mary Anna Mancuso
February 22, 2024
in Commentary
0

By Mary Anna Mancuso, RepublicEn.org 

Florida faces a stark reality: rising sea levels, harsher storms and warming temperatures due to climate change. You might wonder how Florida’s manufacturing sector can be part of the solution. Easy: by supporting the Providing Reliable, Objective, Verifiable Emissions Intensity and Transparency Act (PROVE IT Act), an innovative piece of legislation that could help Florida industries emerge as leaders in carbon efficiency. 

Last month, the U.S. Senate Environment and Public Works Committee passed the PROVE IT Act by an overwhelming bipartisan vote of 14-5. Four Republicans broke from party lines to vote in favor of the act, which Republican co-sponsor Sen. Kevin Cramer of North Dakota has billed as an “‘America first’ environmental policy.”

Pollution is emitted from a manufacturing plant overseas. (iStock image)
Pollution is emitted from a manufacturing plant overseas. (iStock image)

How does it put America first? 

By studying the carbon efficiency of major U.S. industries, most of which are cleaner than global competitors. Yet those dirtier manufacturers compete with superior U.S. products on the global market. By collecting this important emissions data, the U.S. sets the stage for carbon pollution fees that would require dirtier trading partners to either pay us to level the playing field between our varying manufacturing standards or to clean up their act. 

The PROVE IT Act presents a golden opportunity for Florida to demonstrate its leadership in combating climate change. By adopting an “America-first” approach to manufacturing, the state can not only safeguard its own future but also set a powerful example for other nations seeking to balance economic prosperity with environmental responsibility. 

Florida is more than sunshine, Mickey Mouse and oranges. In fact, it is home to an array of diverse industries as well as a growing manufacturing sector such as transportation equipment manufacturing, fabricated metal product manufacturing, wood product manufacturing and chemical manufacturing, to name a few. These industries are likely to be cleaner than their global competitors and thus would have a leg up, which would benefit Florida jobs and the local economy.

Mary Anna Mancuso
Mary Anna Mancuso

Beyond assisting Florida manufacturers, the PROVE IT Act positions America as a global leader in climate action by exposing unfair practices of dirtier competitors, promoting transparency and driving global innovation. By highlighting the lack of environmental standards and practices in other countries, the act will set the stage for an eventual carbon border adjustment mechanism, the policy that will spark other nations to adopt stricter regulations on par with the U.S., encouraging fair competition based on environmental responsibility. 

The PROVE IT Act is the first step in a series of trade policies that would boost Florida’s manufacturing sector, empower American businesses to compete on a level playing field and position the United States as a global leader in climate solutions. By embracing transparency and data-driven decision making, Florida can not only protect its environment but also thrive in the emerging green economy. 

The PROVE IT Act offers a unique opportunity to put both Florida and America first on the path to a sustainable future. Now let’s hope Congress can get it passed! 

Mary Anna Mancuso is a political strategist and a spokesperson for RepublicEn.org, a growing group of conservatives who care about climate change.

If you are interested in submitting an opinion piece to The Invading Sea, email Editor Nathan Crabbe at ncrabbe@fau.edu. Sign up for The Invading Sea newsletter by visiting here.

Tags: Congressforeign pollution feegreenhouse gas emissionsmanufacturingPROVE IT Act
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The Invading Sea is a nonpartisan source for news, commentary and educational content about climate change and other environmental issues affecting Florida. The site is managed by Florida Atlantic University’s Center for Environmental Studies in the Charles E. Schmidt College of Science.

 

 

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