The wildfire smoke that clouded Twin Cities' skies and December tornadoes in southern Minnesota weigh on the minds of legislators pressing for more spending on climate change at the State Capitol.
"In the past, we've talked about climate change as though it's something in the future. And we're seeing it impact our life today," said Rep. Patty Acomb, DFL-Minnetonka, who leads the House Climate Action Caucus. "The window to act is closing if we hope to prevent the worst impacts of climate change."
But with only a few weeks left in the legislative session, there is a chasm between the plans from Senate Republicans and House Democrats to protect the environment and address climate change, and recent debates illustrate the deep political divide. The House passed a $240 million environment and natural resources package Thursday, while the Senate bill amounted to less than $8 million. Various climate-related measures tucked into other House bills are absent in the Senate versions.
Last year the state spent more on the environment that it normally does, said Sen. Bill Ingebrigtsen, R-Alexandria, chair of the Environment and Natural Resources Finance Committee. Since this is not a budgeting year at the Capitol, he said it is unfortunate some lawmakers want to use Minnesota's projected surplus of nearly $9.3 billion to expand state government.
"Everybody thinks that the world is falling in and frankly it's not. And we have scientists on both sides, I get that, and I appreciate that," Ingebrigtsen said on the Senate floor, later adding, "I know the globe is warming, folks. It has been warming for thousands of years. Nothing appreciable, but a thousand years."
His comments come as a new study from ratings firm S&P Global estimated climate change will result in a 4% loss of global annual economic output by 2050, disproportionately hurting poorer countries.
Sen. Scott Dibble, DFL-Minneapolis, said some Republican colleagues mocked his comments about the need for fast action on climate change as they were hanging out in the Senate retiring room, a space where he said the atmosphere is usually collegial.
"They think people like me are running around being hysterical and irrational," Dibble said. "It's discouraging. Me, I'm not feeling very optimistic about our planet."