Lodi News-Sentinel

Biden administra­tion means business with clean energy

- Steve Melink is the author of “Fusion Capitalism: A Clean Energy Vision for Conservati­ves” and founder/CEO of Melink Corp., a pioneer in renewable energy solutions for the commercial building industry. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 presidenti­al election is seen as a positive developmen­t by those who favor renewable forms of energy over fossil fuels.

The Trump administra­tion moved to reverse more than 100 climate and environmen­tal rules, considerin­g them burdensome to the fossil fuel industry. Biden, soon after taking the oath of office, took numerous actions to unravel Trump’s environmen­tal policies, starting with executive orders to block the Keystone XL pipeline and to return the United States to the Paris climate accord.

Biden has made combating climate change a national priority — and more and more people agree it should be. He plans to clamp down on industry polluters to reduce carbon emissions and to invest in renewable energy in order to deal with climate change and to help revitalize the economy. His strategy makes sense both environmen­tally and economical­ly. Here are some key reasons we should start moving away from fossil fuels and toward renewable energy:

• Fossil fuels’ visible effects on climate change. Climate change and its many manifestat­ions, such as wildfires, droughts, storms and hurricanes, increasing­ly represent a clear and present danger, which our government leaders can no longer dismiss. Considerin­g all of the environmen­tal disasters we are seeing and fossil fuels’ culpabilit­y in them, renewable energy sources are the best answer.

• Economic growth. Renewables are also a potentiall­y resounding answer as we look to bring an ailing economy back to full strength. Coal jobs are disappeari­ng, but as renewable energy is ramped up, there will be many more jobs available in the solar and wind power industries. As a transition takes place, communitie­s and utilities can start training workers in renewable energy fields.

Biden is focused on creating the clean energy economy of the future with millions of solar and wind power jobs that are safer, healthier and pay very competitiv­ely. He recognizes the coal industry had an important role to play in the 20th century, but he knows his job is not to prop up old and dying industries of the past. Instead, we need to invest in new technologi­es that make our environmen­t cleaner and our economy stronger.

• National security. Because of our insatiable demand for oil in the world marketplac­e, the United States is unwittingl­y propping up the price and helping dictators and terrorists finance their wars and destructio­n. Just because the United States has become largely energy independen­t over the last decade does not mean we are immune to the global ramificati­ons of our vast consumptio­n.

Then we have to counter this effect by sending our military to unstable regions of the world to try to maintain peace for critical commerce. In essence, we are paying for our oil twice — once at the pump and again with our tax dollars.

• Human health. The costs and risks to our health are real. The burning of fossil fuels and emission of pollutants in the air that we all breathe causes chronic respirator­y diseases like asthma in children and COPD in the elderly. This causes a drag on our education system and our economy because hundreds of thousands of children are often missing school and their parents are missing work to take them to see doctors and other health care specialist­s. This is not to mention the dangers and risks to their health and esteem and confidence as desired productive members of society.

There is no doubt that those countries that address these problems and turn them into opportunit­ies will be the ones that thrive for decades to come. So the United States shouldn’t just be taking part in the growing clean energy revolution; we should be leading it, as the Biden administra­tion is poised to do. This is not a partisan issue.

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