
Pick one or more. We'll use your choices and the connected bills to help you send a message to your elected officials.
Answer the policy questions below or skip any that don't fit your view. We use only your answers and the bills they connect to for your message.
1 bill on this topic
“Federal officials should get advice from industry, national lab, and scientific experts, meet deadlines for key pollution-fee rules, and report each year to Congress on effects on jobs, competition, pollution, and trade.”
1 bill on this topic
“Federal agencies should be able to investigate producers, importers, or countries that try to avoid pollution import fees, then raise charges or block certain imports when evasion is found.”
1 bill on this topic
“Some imports should pay a charge tied to U.S. carbon tax costs, some U.S. exporters should get rebates for carbon tax costs, and customs officials should manage exemptions, filings, appeals, and anti-evasion checks.”
1 bill on this topic
“Some covered imports should face doubled or quadrupled fees because of country status or ownership ties, while some imports used for Defense Department contracts could have the fee reduced to zero.”
1 bill on this topic
“Covered imports should get lower pollution scores when producers use verified recycled materials or approved carbon removal, with more credit for longer-lasting carbon storage.”
1 bill on this topic
“Individual foreign facilities should be able to use their own verified pollution scores instead of country averages if they meet strict environmental, monitoring, transparency, and inspection standards, with public notice for proposed agreements and limits for state-tied facilities in nonmarket economies.”
1 bill on this topic
“Federal officials should set pollution import fees as a percentage of an imported product's customs value, start with country-and-product fee tables, later charge higher rates for higher-pollution tiers, and publish updated fee tables.”
1 bill on this topic
“The United States should be able to lower or waive fees for countries with compatible pollution-tracking systems, and lower-income countries could get extra time, assistance, fee-free periods, or looser pollution limits if they meet set conditions.”
1 bill on this topic
“Federal agencies should compare foreign production pollution with similar U.S. production, count factory, energy, input-material, and shipping emissions, and assume higher pollution when reliable foreign data is missing.”
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