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April 30, 2021
Congressional Climate Camps
Find out more about the briefings in this series below:
Lessons Learned from Past Congresses and Current Attitudes on Climate
The Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI) is holding a Climate Camp online briefing series. We are going over the basics of the legislative process, highlighting key areas and opportunities for achieving near-term and long-term carbon reductions through policy.
Our fourth session looked at a suite of climate solutions that simultaneously reduce greenhouse gas emissions and increase resilience to climate impacts. Briefing speakers discussed how these solutions also advance environmental justice, job creation, and conservation.
Click below to go straight to the different highlights and sections.
Coastal Nature-Based Solutions
Solutions from the Agriculture Sector
Mass Timber – Sustainable Buildings as Carbon Sinks
Achieving Efficiency and Resilience Through Building Codes
Ensuring Win-Wins Advance Environmental Justice
Dr. Bhaskaran Subramanian, Ph.D., Chief, Shoreline Conservation Service, Maryland Department of Natural Resources
Q: What steps do you take to ensure living shorelines are well maintained and not replaced in the future by structural erosion control?
Solutions from the Agricultural Sector
Dr. John Quinn, Associate Professor of Biology, Furman University
Q: Are there areas of the country where we would realize the greatest adaptation or mitigation benefits from these practices? How is that information shared? If members of Congress have questions about this for their districts, where would you refer them to?
Mass Timber – Sustainable Building as Carbon Sinks
Russ Vaagen, Founder and CEO, Vaagen Timbers
Q: Could you comment on the workforce development opportunities that your company has brought to its part of the country as it has grown?
Q: How is increased use of wood in buildings good for our forests?
Kim Cheslak, Director of Codes, New Buildings Institute
Q: What do we mean when we talk about energy efficiency improvements that have resilience benefits and have become part of the code more recently?
Jacqueline Patterson, Senior Director, Environmental and Climate Justice Program, NAACP
Q: What are the main unintended consequences that we should be aware of as we implement win-win policies? How could we improve our decision-making to be more inclusive and equitable to prevent unintended negative consequences and maximize the positive consequences and multiple benefits?
Highlights compiled by Rachel Snead and Celine Yang