Clinton on the Issues

A look at Hillary Clinton’s environmental platform and record 7


Platform & Record In-Depth

  • Supports reducing electricity consumption 20 percent from projected levels by 2020 through phaseout of incandescent light bulbs and other efficiency standards.

  • Advocates for 60 billion gallons of homegrown biofuels to be available for use in vehicles by 2030.

  • Says she is "agnostic" on nuclear power, having "real concerns" about the power source in general and the Indian Point nuclear plant in New York state in particular. She has pointed out that nuclear plants could be a target for terrorist attacks.

  • Opposes the storage of nuclear waste at the Yucca Mountain repository being built in southern Nevada.

  • Opposes oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

  • Supports requiring publicly traded companies to disclose to the Securities and Exchange Commission the risks climate change poses to their business.

  • A cosponsor of the Boxer-Sanders Global Warming Pollution Reduction Act, the most stringent climate bill in the Senate.

  • Wants to create an energy-research agency modeled on the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

  • Has suggested that the federal government could help cover health-care costs for retired U.S. autoworkers in exchange for automakers producing more fuel-efficient cars, an idea Barack Obama has been pushing.

  • Took a tour of Alaska in 2005 to see the on-the-ground impacts of climate change.

  • Has been an active member of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee during her whole tenure in the Senate.

  • Calls for a Green Building Fund through which the federal government would allocate $1 billion annually to states to make grants or low-interest loans to improve energy efficiency in public buildings, such as schools, police stations, firehouses, and offices.

  • Sponsor of the Zero-Emissions Building Act, which would require new federal buildings and major renovations to be carbon-neutral by 2030, and to have gradually reduced emissions in the years before then.

  • Voted against the final version of the 2005 Energy Policy Act, a sweeping, oil-friendly energy bill opposed by enviros, because she said it "ignores our biggest energy challenges, subsidizes mature energy industries like oil and nuclear, and rolls back our environmental laws." The act passed and Bush signed it into law in August 2005.

  • Introduced the Coordinated Environmental Health Network Act in 2004 and again in 2005, which would have helped orchestrate federal health-agency cooperation and provide public access to an electronic database of chronic diseases and relevant environmental factors. The bill went nowhere both times, but Clinton said she has plans to reintroduce it.

  • In 2005, cosponsored the Child, Worker, and Consumer-Safe Chemicals Act, which would have mandated greater scrutiny of new and existing chemicals, offered market incentives for developing safer alternatives to toxics, and created a publicly accessible database with info on the toxicity of chemicals on the market.

  • Successfully lobbied [PDF] the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation to let International Paper conduct a two-week test burn of tires at a mill in upstate New York in 2005. The burn was so polluting that the company had to suspend it after a few days.

  • When asked what she would do as president to address water and land issues in the U.S. West, Clinton said she would emphasize renewable energy, protect national parks and wilderness areas, reform the Mining Law of 1872, and employ a more balanced approach than the Bush administration to traditional energy development on public lands.

  • Cosponsored the Clean Power Act in 2001, which proposed requiring power plants to significantly reduce harmful emissions of sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, mercury, and carbon dioxide. The bill did not move forward nor pass.

  • In 2003, voted in favor of an amendment to the 2003 energy bill to increase fuel-economy standards for passenger cars to 40 mpg by 2014.

Still Haven't Gotten Enough?

What did we miss? Tell us below in comments. We'll update this page as the presidential campaign continues.


Kate Sheppard and Todd Hymas Samkara contributed to this fact sheet.

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  1. TitanGreens Posted 12:57 am
    17 Jan 2008

    Clinton in the 2008 Climate CupThe wild and wacky team at TitanGreens.com took a stab at determining the "greenest candidate" with a fake tournament entitled the 2008 Climate Cup. How will Hillary and rest of the Democratic hopefuls fare under the high-stakes pressure of "The Cup"?

    Check it out...

    http://titancast.titantv.com/afdfefb5bcec4ccca2f2e5a9ec40 ...

  2. planetthoughts Posted 10:23 pm
    04 Feb 2008

    Sigh.They all talk so well (that is why they are up there as finalists for president).  But I am afraid none of the remaining candidates (except Mike Gravel, who I believe is not on the ballot here in NYS - I will find out in one hour) are serious enough about the environment.  In fact, Hillary Clinton here seems to focus only on global warming.  Maybe that is in order to avoid blank stares from the audience, but the real problems involve warming, and resources (water, soil) depleting, and other forms of pollution.  And 2050?  That sounds much too late.
  3. AuntBeth Posted 7:30 am
    06 Feb 2008

    Town Hall broadcast, 2-4-2008Hillary referred to addressing climate change as the "equivalent of the space race".
    I think that should be added.
  4. frw Posted 9:18 am
    06 Feb 2008

    Why only energy issues?It's not just Hillary, but also Grist and the League of Conservation Voters that have sudden amnesia about every single environmental issue that doesn't directly relate to global warming.  Toxins, loss f biodiversity, deforestation, protecting roadless areas, plummeting marine populations, solid waste (the floating mass of trash in the Pacific Ocean) etc.  When the enviro.'s stop talking about all of those, I guess they aren't problems anymore.  I guess we must have solved all those problems during the past seven years.
  5. planetthoughts Posted 9:32 pm
    24 Apr 2008

    Warming only all the time?FRW, I am with you 100% i.e. the issues are bigger - and in a way more solvable - than just global warming and CO2 emissions.  Oil and energy depletion, pollution, water shortages, and more, these are all vital problems.  And they all originate due to a separation of people from our own life support systems, due to an attitude of humans vs. nature, the "conquering" of nature.  Summarizing from Chief Seattle: "The Earth does not belong to us, we belong to the Earth".  But forgetting that, we saw off the tree limb on which we are sitting.  The crash will not be pretty, and may be permanently crippling.  It is time to wake up.  The answer is to live differently, and to throw out unresponsive governments, and to make this a more humane world for all life.

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Series Intro
Interviews and info on the presidential candidates' environmental positions 53
Grist interviews Vilsack; Vilsack quits presidential race 2
A look at Barack Obama's environmental platform and record 11
An interview with Barack Obama about his presidential platform on energy and the environment 28
A look at John Edwards' environmental platform and record 1
An interview with John Edwards about his presidential platform on energy and the environment 15
A look at Dennis Kucinich's environmental platform and record 6
An interview with Dennis Kucinich about his presidential platform on energy and the environment 34
A look at Chris Dodd's environmental platform and record 0
An interview with Chris Dodd about his presidential platform on energy and the environment 1
A look at Bill Richardson's environmental platform and record 1
An interview with Bill Richardson about his presidential platform on energy and the environment 7
A look at Mike Gravel's environmental platform and record 1
An interview with Mike Gravel about his presidential platform on energy and the environment 5
A look at Hillary Clinton's environmental platform and record 7
An interview with Hillary Clinton about her presidential platform on energy and the environment 32
A look at the environmental record of Joe Biden, Barack Obama's running mate 1
An interview with Joe Biden about energy and the environment 2
A look at John McCain's environmental platform and record 1
An interview with John McCain about his presidential platform on energy and the environment 9
An interview with Mike Huckabee about his presidential platform on energy and the environment 2
A look at Mike Huckabee's environmental platform and record 2
An interview with Sam Brownback about his presidential platform on energy and the environment 1
A look at Sam Brownback's environmental platform and record 0
An interview with Tom Tancredo about his presidential platform on energy and the environment 7
A look at Tom Tancredo's environmental platform and record 0
An interview with Ron Paul about his presidential platform on energy and the environment 55
A look at Ron Paul's environmental platform and record 6
A look at Rudy Giuliani's environmental platform and record 1
A look at Mitt Romney's environmental platform and record 4
A look at Duncan Hunter's environmental platform and record 0
A look at Fred Thompson's environmental platform and record 0
An interview with Ralph Nader about his presidential platform on energy and the environment 9
A look at Ralph Nader's environmental platform and record 3
Green Party presidential candidate Cynthia McKinney talks to Grist 19
An interview with Bob Barr about his presidential platform on energy and the environment 3
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