Democrats and Republicans in Washington, D.C. may be at loggerheads over carbon emissions, but things are different on the state level.
Even as their official representatives decry the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and call global warming a myth, some of the most conservative state governments in the nation are quietly experimenting with policies that reduce their carbon footprints, according to a new study from Stanford University’s Hoover Institution.
The report highlights states like Mississippi, which has substantially tightened up the rules for energy efficiency in commercial and state-owned buildings in recent years. In Texas — where the state attorney general recently threatened to sue to the EPA to block implementation of proposed carbon regulations — the city of Austin has experimented with a “Value of Solar Tariff” (VOST), meaning that the local energy utility credits residential consumers for any power they generate through solar energy.
And the list goes on.
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Hoover Institution research fellow Jeremy Carl, one of the co-authors of the report, said the report was intended to illustrate “the individual things that states are doing that often make both environmental and economic sense.” He suggested that red and blue states were more likely to implement environmentally sound policies when the federal government didn’t insist on a “one size fits all” approach.
“I think if you can present a lot of them with something they can see in their own backyard that really does make environmental and economic sense, and they don’t feel like it’s being shoved on them, then they’re likely to look on it with different eyes,” he said.
As previously reported by msnbc, the state of Oklahoma has also been quietly taking steps to reduce carbon emissions and generate more wind power. Predominantly Republican cities like Grand Haven, Mich. are reportedly examining ways of mitigating the effects of climate change, although they steer clear of referring to the phenomenon by that name.









