The Pak Banker

Rebuilding infrastruc­ture

- Ben Evans

The two-step infrastruc­ture package that's moving through Congress is the biggest opportunit­y we've ever had to address the climate crisis, putting the U.S. in a position to lead by example in the wake of an alarming internatio­nal report warning that our window for action is closing.

President Biden and Democratic leaders in Congress deserve credit for insisting that important climate initiative­s be a priority, supporting robust investment­s in electric vehicle infrastruc­ture, energy efficiency, renewable power and other sectors.

But if we're really going to spend hundreds of billions of dollars building new infrastruc­ture as Democrats are planning to do, we need to ensure that climate mitigation is baked into the entire package. We can't settle for anything less than building smart, sustainabl­e communitie­s with green and resilient schools, hospitals, affordable housing and other public facilities. Right now, it's not clear that will happen, posing a real risk that even with good intentions, a frenzied and messy legislativ­e process could result in poorly planned projects that lock in decades of unnecessar­y greenhouse gas emissions.

Consider public schools, which are in dire need of facilities improvemen­ts. A GAO report released last year found that 54 percent of public school districts need to update or replace multiple building systems or features in their schools. This is particular­ly true for low-wealth school districts that too often have aging and unhealthy buildings, and that at times are forced to shut down over inadequate heating and cooling. The lack of modern, healthy buildings in these communitie­s is a missed opportunit­y to boost students' ability to learn along with attracting and supporting teachers.

As President Biden has said, addressing this disparity by investing in modern, sustainabl­e school facilities should absolutely be part of the infrastruc­ture package. But we have to make sure that we actually build them back better.

With nearly 100,000 public K-12 schools nationwide spending $8 billion annually on energy, it is a tremendous opportunit­y to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and cut costs. Simple steps like requiring sustainabi­lity standards such as ENERGY STAR and LEED for major school renovation­s and new constructi­on projects that receive funding would not only deliver massive savings and emissions reductions but also improved indoor air quality.

Affordable housing is another good example. President Biden made safe, energy efficient and affordable housing a pillar of his Build Back Better platform because it meets so many goals - it addresses the housing affordabil­ity crisis, creates jobs, and reduces energy consumptio­n and related carbon emissions. But could Congress - in the blitz to seize the precarious opening they have to pass something approve the funding while failing to incorporat­e meaningful climate criteria? The result could once again yield another generation of energywast­ing affordable housing that saddles residents with high energy costs and drives up emissions for decades. We should insist on minimum energy performanc­e for any new projects receiving funding, with incentives or priority treatment for projects that go above and beyond.

This is not an idle concern. The infrastruc­ture we're talking about accounts for the vast majority of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions: Homes and buildings account for nearly 40 percent while transporta­tion accounts for about a third. And Congress is already demonstrat­ing a willingnes­s to allow lax requiremen­ts to slip through. In the bipartisan infrastruc­ture legislatio­n that recently passed the Senate, for example, a new Carbon Reduction Program for transporta­tion projects significan­tly eased the original climate requiremen­ts that states must follow to receive grant money, leaving loopholes that could result in projects across the country that don't actually reduce emissions.

The risk of additional softening is even higher in the second act of the infrastruc­ture package - the Democratic-only budget reconcilia­tion package that will follow the bipartisan bill - because of the arcane procedural rules around the legislatio­n.

 ??  ?? ‘‘The risk of additional softening is even higher in the second act of the infrastruc­ture package the Democratic-only budget reconcilia­tion package that will follow the bipartisan bill - because of the arcane procedural rules
around the legislatio­n.”
‘‘The risk of additional softening is even higher in the second act of the infrastruc­ture package the Democratic-only budget reconcilia­tion package that will follow the bipartisan bill - because of the arcane procedural rules around the legislatio­n.”

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