The Columbus Dispatch

Yellen: Climate change could harm economy

Warns natural disasters may affect supply chains

- Hannah Schoenbaum

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned Tuesday of economic calamity if climate change is not addressed with immediate government interventi­on.

Joined by local business owners and prominent Democrats in North Carolina, Yellen said the increasing frequency and severity of natural disasters could create devastatin­g short-term supply reductions of everyday goods that could cause prices to skyrocket.

Supply chain disruption­s like those experience­d on a global scale during the COVID-19 pandemic could soon become commonplac­e, she said during a visit to Cypress Creek Renewables’ solar farm in Chapel Hill.

“Here in North Carolina, you remember well the devastatin­g toll of Hurricane Florence. That disaster killed 22 Americans. It led to $24 billion in damage and left a million North Carolinian­s without power,” Yellen said.

As North Carolina is gearing up for several tight races in November, Yellen pitched the benefits of the Democrats’ new climate, health and tax law that will spend $375 billion over the next decade on climate-related investment­s.

Combined with last year’s bipartisan infrastruc­ture law, the investment­s total more than $430 billion. The money will be spent on everything from providing tax credits to purchasers of qualifying electric vehicles to constructi­ng clean-manufactur­ing facilities.

Yellen said spending will be particular­ly impactful in “noncoastal communitie­s that have suffered from disinvestm­ent.”

Some North Carolinian­s who lost their homes in Florence in 2018 and Hurricane Matthew in 2016 are still waiting on repairs or permanent housing accommodat­ions, due in large part to supply and labor shortages brought on by the pandemic, according to the state’s disaster recovery agency.

Other policies championed by President Joe Biden – including the CHIPS Act – have focused on shoring up essential resources.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States