Connecticut Post

Kerry: Despite setbacks, U.S. will reach climate goals

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WASHINGTON — U.S. climate envoy John Kerry said Friday that setbacks for President Joe Biden’s climate efforts at home have “slowed the pace” of some of the commitment­s from other countries to cut climate-wrecking fossil fuels, but he insisted the U.S. would still achieve its own ambitious climate goals in time.

Kerry spoke to The Associated Press after a major Supreme Court ruling Thursday limited the Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s options for regulating climate pollution from power plants. The ruling raised the prospect the conservati­ve-controlled court could go on to hinder other efforts by the executive branch to cut the country’s coal, oil and gas emissions. It came after Democrats failed in getting what was to be Biden’s signature climate legislatio­n through the narrowly divided Senate.

The Biden administra­tion is striving now to show audiences at home and abroad that the U.S. can still make significan­t climate progress, and strike deals with other countries to do the same. Scientists say only a few years are left to stave off the worst levels of global warming, triggering ever more deadly droughts, storms, wildfires and other disasters.

Kerry, Biden’s climate negotiator abroad, said he had not talked to foreign counterpar­ts since the Supreme Court ruling, which some climate scientists called a gut punch and a disaster.

“But I’m confident they’ll ask me questions,” Kerry said. “But my answer is going to be look, we’re going to meet our goals … and the president is going to continue to fight for legislatio­n from the Congress.“

“We absolutely are convinced we can meet our goals,” Kerry said.

Biden has pledged to cut the nation’s greenhouse gas emissions in half by the end of the decade and to have an emissions-free power sector by 2035. Despite two Democrats joining with Republican­s to block what was supposed to have been transforma­tive legislatio­n moving the United States to cleaner energy, Biden has managed to free significan­t funding for electric charging stations and some other moves. The EPA has pledged to release alternativ­e regulation to limit climate damage from the power sector early next year.

Kerry cited continuing progress in climate efforts abroad this year, including more government­s committing to faster cuts in emissions and more signing a U.S.-backed methane pledge targeting climatedam­aging leaks, venting and flaring from natural gas industries.

“This decision by the Supreme Court … is disappoint­ing, but … it doesn’t take away our ability to do a whole bunch of things that we need to get done,“Kerry said.

“President Biden has enormous authority to continue to move forward. We are going to move forward. I am absolutely confident about our ability to continue to offer leadership on a global basis, which we’re doing right now.”

Kerry also pointed to progress the United States was making in cutting fossil fuel emissions independen­tly of the government efforts, including through electric cars and other marketplac­e technologi­cal advances, and through clean-energy pushes from California and dozens of other states, mostly those led by Democrats.

Kerry described legislatio­n on tax credits to encourage cleaner energy as common sense and doable. He declined to talk about the impact if even those failed to clear Congress.

“I wouldn’t be a gloomy-doomy over this,” he said. “I just say we got to work harder and fight harder.”

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