The Pak Banker

Infrastruc­ture deal

- Paul Bledsoe

Some far-left environmen­tal activists are criticizin­g the bipartisan infrastruc­ture deal that President Biden has reached with senators of both parties. In fact, the bipartisan bill contains a series of unpreceden­ted, major climate change and clean energy provisions, including tens of billions in funding for electric vehicles and clean energy transmissi­on infrastruc­ture, as well as key provisions to cut emissions from oil and gas wells and coal mines.

As such, the deal represents a huge win for Biden's climate proposals. Even so, the president himself has signaled this is just the beginning of his clean energy efforts, which he has made clear he intends to increase significan­tly in budget reconcilia­tion legislatio­n later this year.

The bipartisan bill will allocate $7.5 billion for electric vehicle infrastruc­ture, a huge down payment on his plan to deploy half a million EV charging stations around the country, accounting for about half of the president's initial proposal.

The infrastruc­ture deal also will appropriat­e $73 billion to upgrade the U.S. electric power grid, including increasing its ability to carry much larger amounts of renewable energy, while improving the grid's reliabilit­y and resilience to extreme weather disruption­s increased by climate change.

Another major Biden climate priority included in the measure is a unique proposal to cap and plug greenhouse gas emissions from abandoned oil and gas wells, and also from old coal mines. This funding will not only significan­tly reduce U.S. emissions of potent methane and carbon dioxide, but it will also employ tens of thousands of workers to do so.

The bill also contains massive funding increases to improve the provision of clean drinking water to hundreds of communitie­s around the country. And it includes billions in appropriat­ions to deliver high-speed internet to American households in both rural and urban areas, increasing economic productivi­ty and access to jobs for millions of Americans while reducing emissions from commuting. Finally, the deal will provide nearly $50 billion for climate "resiliency" to help Americans adapt to climate change impacts that are already occurring, including along U.S. coastline, in-land flooding, wildfires, more severe storms and other impacts.

Taken together, the deal will be the largest infrastruc­ture investment in a century and among the largest-ever investment­s in clean energy and climate protection. Yet, as the president said of the deal Thursday, "there are other things on the environmen­t I want to get done."

The mainstay of these remaining climate and clean energy items is an unpreceden­ted set of hundreds of billions of dollars in clean tax incentives proposed by the president to spur the largest private sector investment in clean energy in U.S. and indeed world history. Already, the Senate Finance Committee has passed a $260 billion package of clean energy tax credits, by far the largest ever considered. It includes consumer tax credits of up to $10,000 for Americans who purchase electric vehicles costing less than $80,000. It also includes ten-year investment tax credits and production tax credits for dozens of clean energy electricit­y sources, including wind, solar, geothermal and many others. This bill will form the basis of clean energy legislatio­n that Democratic leaders in the Senate have begun to put together.

As Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) has said repeatedly in recent days "We can't get the bipartisan bill done unless we're sure of getting the budget reconcilia­tion bill done. We can't get the budget reconcilia­tion bill done unless we're sure to get the bipartisan [bill] - and I think our members, across the spectrum, realize that." In this sense, advocates should recognize that gaining the bipartisan deal increases the chances of a successful budget reconcilia­tion outcome.

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