Introducing “The Citizen’s Guide to Climate Policy”

According to The Center for Public Integrity, more than 770 companies and interest groups hired an estimated 2,340 lobbyists to influence federal climate policy in 2008.  That means every day, 2,340 briefcase-holding and business card-carrying bodies walk through the halls of Congress with the sole aim of either strengthening or weakening the policies that will help spark a clean energy revolution and combat the climate crisis. From Chevron to Chevrolet, from Alcoa to Xerox, everybody is funding somebody to argue their case. This Washington insider game is what’s determining the climate policies that make it out of Congress.

When you think of it though, why should these inside-the-beltway lobbyists have all the clout? Our future as individual human beings is at stake along with the future of major corporations and utility districts! How can the everyday citizen get on the same playing field as these lobbyists? These questions encouraged us, two college students who are part of the youth climate movement, to set out writing a guide to climate policy that would help every American understand the policy details and political context around the climate debate in Congress. The result is “The Citizen’s Guide to Climate Policy,” a short booklet that will prepare you to become a lobbyist for change. The only way we’re going to get the strong climate policy we need is if a group of impassioned citizens engage their elected officials , and are so well versed on the implications of specific policies that we can battle on the same ground as the industry lobbyists who are walking the halls of Congress.

“The Citizen’s Guide to Climate Policy” sets out to help engaged citizens join the climate policy debate without having to wade through the wonky policy talk of Washington. As advocates and activists across the country examine the Waxman-Markey climate bill that passed through the House of Representatives last month, the guide helps flesh out the crucial policy elements that were sticking points for swing votes: allowance allocation, carbon offsets, emissions reductions targets , and more. By explaining the major elements of this monumental bill and putting forth reasons to support or reject them, we hope we can help expand the climate movement’s power in Washington. Most importantly, we hope the guide inspires you to action. We know that by familiarizing ourselves with the legislation in Washington and by having earnest discussions with our elected officials, we can help secure the safe climate future we need.

As Bill McKibben says in his forward to the guide, “This booklet is a scorecard. But not for passively sitting by and watching the game. It’s an invitation to get in the game, to become passionately involved while there’s still some hope of affecting the outcome.”

4 Responses to “Introducing “The Citizen’s Guide to Climate Policy””


  1. 1 Matt Maiorana Jul 10th, 2009 at 1:01 pm

    Awesome job, as usual! Definitely a good resource moving forward. Many thanks :) .

  2. 2 okiepo Jul 11th, 2009 at 12:29 pm

    Thanks for the great work Ben & Lois!!! This will be an important tool for educating young people in my part of the world that get very little coverage of the climate bill in the mainstream press.

  3. 3 jennifer r Jul 13th, 2009 at 2:47 am

    I’ve already started going through this and it looks amazing! Just one typo that might need correcting…I think it should be Foreword rather than Forward.

    Great job!! Thanks for doing this!

  1. 1 links for 2009-07-11 - Kevin Bondelli’s Youth Vote Blog Trackback on Jul 11th, 2009 at 2:30 pm
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About Ben


Ben Wessel is a 21-year old student at Middlebury College in Middlebury, VT. Growing up in Washington, DC he has always been fascinated by politics, and feels that strong legislation and real advocacy efforts from the grassroots, particularly young people, will be a main factor in solving the climate crisis. His passion for activism, policy, and adventure has taken him from a WWF-sponsored "Voyage for the Future" in the Norwegian Arctic to the UN Climate Change Negotiations in Poznan, Poland and Copenhagen to the halls of Congress and Capitol Hill with 1Sky and Powershift '07 '09. Most recently, Ben helped lead the "Race to Replace Vermont Yankee," a youth clean energy voter campaign in Vermont that helped support clean energy candidates for Governor and other elected positions in Vermont. When not geeking out the latest CBO scoring of climate legislation, he is likely to be found snowboarding, cooking, or rooting for the Washington Redskins.

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