The Gold Coast Bulletin

‘Time to act’ on climate

Biden out to prove it is easy being green

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WASHINGTON: President Joe Biden vowed the US would lead the world’s charge to confront the “existentia­l threat” of the climate crisis, as he signed a raft of new orders and announced a global summit in April.

The measures included placing a hold on new oil and gas drilling on federal lands and offshore, as the leader of the world’s second biggest carbon emitter began making good on his campaign pledges.

“It is time to act,” Mr Biden said. “We’ve already waited too long to deal with this cliergy, mate crisis. We can’t wait any longer. We see it with our own eyes, we feel it. We know it in our bones.

“I’m signing today an executive order to supercharg­e our administra­tion’s ambitious plan to confront the existentia­l threat of climate change. We must lead the global response.”

Mr Biden has appointed former secretary of state John Kerry as his internatio­nal climate envoy and said the US will host a Leaders’ Climate Summit on April 22, the fifth anniversar­y of the signing ceremony of the Paris agreement.

The US is expected to announce drasticall­y increased emission goals at the meeting.

Mr Kerry earlier said the US would be willing to work with China on climate negotiatio­ns, despite the two countries’ disagreeme­nts on other issues ranging from intellectu­al property theft to South China Sea tensions.

“Those issues will never be traded for anything that has to do with climate, that’s not going to happen. But climate is a critical stand-alone issue that we have to deal on,” he said.

Environmen­tal groups applauded the administra­tion.

John Morton, former senior director for Energy and Climate Change in Barack Obama’s White House who is now at climate advisory firm Pollinatio­n, said the actions “should leave no doubt that climate change will be front and centre priority throughout this administra­tion”.

The headline domestic policy announceme­nt was the pause on new federal drilling contracts, a politicall­y explosive issue in the election campaign, particular­ly in the state of Pennsylvan­ia.

But Mr Biden also made clear there would be no ban on fracking, which has made the US the world’s biggest producer of natural gas and is seen by some as a key transition endespite its environmen­tal harms. Other steps included a pledge to conserve 30 per cent of all federal land and water by 2030, and establishi­ng climate considerat­ions as an essential element of US foreign policy and national security.

The federal actions are intended to complement a $US2 trillion ($2.6 trillion) infrastruc­ture plan the president is expected to pitch to Congress next month, which he promised would serve as the engine of future economic growth and “create millions of good paying union jobs”.

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