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This week’s must read: An eclipse is just what the U.S. power sector has been waiting for (Bloomberg)

Find out how much of the eclipse you will see based on where you live—and note that Rep. Bob Inglis lives in the totality zone.

The Bay State prepares: Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker has released a set of new rules aimed at bringing the commonwealth into full compliance with a 2008 state law that calls for a 25 percent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by the end of the decade. “Combatting and preparing for the impact of climate change remains a top priority of our administration, and requires collaboration across state government and with stakeholders throughout Massachusetts,” Baker said. His executive order also directs the state to begin planning for climate change adaptation “and working with cities and towns across the state to assess vulnerability and build resiliency to address climate change impacts.”

California mayor calls for distance: San Diego’s Republican Mayor Kevin Faulconer said California’s GOP “shouldn’t be a carbon copy of the national GOP” on issues that are critical to the state, calling for “California Republicans to stop ignoring climate change” and instead tap innovation and embrace modernization. “If we opt out of the conversation, we’re only going to get extreme one-party solutions. We should be proud to offer our own plans to preserve our environment —plans that don’t plunder the middle class.”

So many Jesters at court: President Donald Trump and EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt are this week’s co-jesters. Trump earned his half of the designation after rescinding the federal flood risk management standard, an Obama era directive requiring public infrastructure projects built in flood-prone areas to account for sea level rise in order to receive federal funding. The SmarterSafer Coalition—of which our ecoright, carbon tax partner R Street is a member—estimates that every dollar spent on disaster mitigation saves four dollars in recovery and rebuilding costs. Rescinding this policy will result in “stuff being built in the wrong places and being built in the wrong ways,” according to R Street president Eli Lehrer.

Rep. Carlos Curbelo, whose Florida district sits on the frontline of climate impacts, tweeted this in response:

This isn’t fiscally conservative. Irresponsible & will lead to taxpayer $ being wasted on projects that may not be built to endure flooding https://t.co/ThLhVwJyIX
— Rep. Carlos Curbelo (@RepCurbelo) August 15, 2017

The President is also dismissive of key findings in a massive federal climate report, saying “President Obama said that global warming is the greatest threat. I disagree.” Which makes a nice segue into Pruitt’s half of the honor. The chief climate hoaxster says he and his staff will determine the “accuracy” of the National Climate Assessment report, which he says “ought to be subjected to peer-reviewed, objective-reviewed methodology and evaluation” because “science should not be politicized. ” The report was peer reviewed by a 14-member panel of the National Academies of Science.

Tweet of the week: Who says science isn’t cool? While scanning the feed of our favorite climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe, we found this very interesting (if not a little gross) gem.

We need more good ecoright climate news so if you don’t have plans this weekend, go out and make some. Report back.