Lodi News-Sentinel

Green New Deal draft calls for jobs, omits fuel ban

- By Ari Natter

WASHINGTON — Guaranteed jobs, health care and housing are in a draft of the Green New Deal environmen­tal package set to be unveiled by Democrats this week, but the proposal doesn’t explicitly include the ban on fossil fuels called for by some supporters.

Instead, the draft of the much anticipate­d resolution being crafted by Democrats Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a New York representa­tive, and Ed Markey, a Massachuse­tts senator, calls for 100 percent power from “clean, renewable and zero emission energy sources.” While the proposal calls for reaching “net-zero greenhouse gas emissions,” it omits specific language sought by some progressiv­es, who could be feel betrayed after rallying behind the plan at an early stage.

Corbin Trent, a spokesman for Ocasio-Cortez, said the document has yet to be completed and is still changing. But the five-page draft obtained by Bloomberg provides early details of how Democrats plan to define what is quickly becoming a centerpiec­e of their agenda on Capitol Hill and the 2020 campaign trail.

“This is the most ambitious climate and economic justice plans for Congress in our lifetime,” said Stephen O’Hanlon, a spokesman for Sunrise Movement, the grassroots group that has partnered with Ocasio-Cortez to push for the Green New Deal and did not provide the document. “We want to be clear that in the Sunrise Movement’s view the resolution is a road map for organizing the Green New Deal over the coming year and going to work with think tanks, political leaders and different

“We want to be clear that in the Sunrise Movement’s view the resolution is a road map for organizing the Green New Deal over the coming year and going to work with think tanks, political leaders and different stakeholde­rs to develop the vision for the Green New Deal for the coming year.” STEPHEN O’HANLON SUNRISE MOVEMENT SPOKESMAN

stakeholde­rs to develop the vision for the Green New Deal for the coming year.”

The draft framework, a nonbinding resolution that aims to firm up what had been a loosely defined legislativ­e wish list to halt global warming, calls for a series of “Green New Deal Projects.” Those include a dramatic expansion of renewable energy, energy and water efficiency upgrades for all U.S. buildings, and an overhaul of the country’s transporta­tion system to eliminate pollution and emissions from the sector “as much as technologi­cally feasible,” with a nod to investment in zero-emission vehicles, public transit and highspeed rail.

Others tenets of the proposal range from grand: “massive growth in clean U.S. manufactur­ing, removing pollution byproducts and greenhouse gas emissions from that sector as much as technologi­cally feasible” to funding to harden and lessen the impacts of climate change, to building the smart grid, and cleaning up hazardous waste sites and restoring threatened lands.

The proposal didn’t specify funding sources, but the draft cites a landmark climate report released late last year by the Trump administra­tion that said climate change is expected to cause more than $5 trillion in lost economic output in the U.S. by the end of the century. “Accounting for the true cost of emissions” and new public investment will be required, the document says.

The omission of a specific ban on fossil fuels is a nod to moderates who feared it was unfeasible and seen as too extreme and was a nod to labor unions who had concerns with the language. At the same time inclusion of the phrase clean energy leaves the door open to nuclear and carbon capture loathed by some in the environmen­tal community. The omission of a specific ban on fossil fuels, which is still subject to change, was earlier reported by Politico.

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