Bernie Sanders rolled out a 16-page climate change plan on Monday that combines many of his long-held environmental positions, like dropping fossil fuel subsidies and banning offshore drilling, with a couple of new ideas.

Those new proposals include a pledge to cut carbon pollution 40 percent by 2030, primarily by instituting a carbon tax. He’d also create a Clean-Energy Workforce of some 10 million jobs, and emphasize climate adaptation and policies that put low-income communities first.

Like Martin O’Malley and Hillary Clinton, Sanders would grow investment in clean energy and efficiency and modernize infrastructure and the energy grid. Unlike Clinton, however, Sanders isn’t shy about emphasizing his plan for slowing the supply of fossil fuels: He’d ban oil and liquefied natural gas exports, Arctic drilling, mountaintop mining, and proposed pipelines similar to Keystone XL.

What truly separates Sanders’s plan from those of the other Democratic candidates, though, is its emphasis on special interests and big money in campaigns (which fits into the larger themes of Sanders’s campaign). The U.S. can’t take necessary action on climate change, Sanders says, until polluters lose their stranglehold on the political process.

“Let’s be clear: the reason we haven’t solved climate change isn’t because we aren’t doing our part, it’s because a small subsection of the 1 percent are hell-bent on doing everything in their power to block action,” Sanders’s plan states.