Santa Cruz Sentinel

Biden picks diverse set to lead on energy policy

- By Ellen Knickmeyer and Matthew Daly

President-elect chooses both deal-makers and fighters to lead a climate team that could effect lasting change.

WASHINGTON >> Joe Biden is picking deal-makers and fighters to lead a climate team he’ll ask to remake and clean up the nation’s transporta­tion and powerplant systems, and as fast as politicall­y possible.

While the presidente­lect’s picks have the experience to do the heavy lifting required in a climate overhaul of the U. S. economy, they also seem to be reassuring skeptics that he won’t neglect the low-income, working class and minority communitie­s hit hardest by fossil fuel pollution and climate change.

Prog ressives, energ y lobbyists, environmen­tal groups and auto workers on Wednesday welcomed Biden’s choice of popular former Mayor Pete Buttigieg as transporta­tion secretary. His expected picks of former Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm for energy secretary and former Environmen­tal Protection Agency chief Gina McCarthy as leader of domestic climate efforts also were met with general applause.

Along with the yet-tobe-named heads of EPA and the Interior Department, Buttigieg, Granholm and McCarthy will be part of an effort to rapidly build and develop technology to retool the United States’ transporta­tion and power grid systems from petro

leum and coal to a greater reliance on solar, wind and other cleaner forms of energy.

Democratic Rep. Deb Haaland of New Mexico is considered the frontrunne­r for Interior — and won a key endorsemen­t Wednesday from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi — but Biden has not announced his choice. If selected, Haaland would be the first Native American to serve as a Cabinet secretary.

Biden has pledged to make slowing the impacts of climate change a top priority and has laid out an ambitious plan to reduce U.S. greenhouse emissions to net-zero by 2050. The plan includes an immediate return to the global 2015 Paris Agreement on climate and a pledge to stop all climate- damaging emissions

from U. S. power plants by 2035.

Among those on his climate team, Granholm as Michigan’s governor helped nudge auto workers toward accepting a switch to production of more electric vehicles. That will be one of several big ticket clean- energy efforts she and others in the administra­tion will be pushing under Biden’s promised $2 trillion climate plan, which will face obstacles from Republican­s in Congress and battles over which priorities to implement first.

“She’s a good lady,” said retired United Auto Workers local president Pat Sweeney, who remembers Granholm for helping to broker the Detroit auto bailout during the 2008- 09 financial crisis. “She’ll do a good job.”

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 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? On July 28, 2016, former Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm speaks during the final day of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelph­ia. Biden is expected to pick Granholm as energy secretary.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE On July 28, 2016, former Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm speaks during the final day of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelph­ia. Biden is expected to pick Granholm as energy secretary.

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