The Oklahoman

Sanders releases $16.3 trillion climate plan

- By Kathleen Ronayne and Juana Summers

Senator's proposal builds on Green New Deal, calls for US economy to move to renewable energy

PARADISE, Calif. — Democratic presidenti­al candidate Bernie Sanders released a $ 16.3 trillion climate plan Thursday that builds on the Green New Deal and calls for the United States to move to renewable energy across the economy by 2050 and declare climate change a national emergency.

While the Vermont senator had already endorsed the sweeping Democratic proposal to combat climate change and had teamed up with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio- Cortez of New York on climate legislatio­n, Sanders' climate plan provides the most detail yet on how he envisions the climate change moonshot taking shape if he is elected president.

Sanders describes his plan, released Thursday, as a “ten-year, nationwide mobilizati­on centered on equity and humanity” that would create 20 million new jobs. The Green New Deal resolution, which Ocasio-Cortez put forth with Sen. Ed Markey of Massachuse­tts, calls on the nation to eliminate its carbon footprint by 2030 and to shift away from fossil fuels such as oil and coal and replace them with renewable energy sources such as wind and solar power.

Among Sanders' ideas is sourcing 100% of the country's electricit­y from renewable and zeroemissi­ons power. He is calling for committing $2.18 trillion in grants for low- and middle-income families to weatherize and retrofit their homes and businesses, with the goal of reducing residentia­l energy consumptio­n by 30%. He would charge the Energy Department with making sure that both new and existing commercial structures, as well as highincome home owners, meet his administra­tion's energy retrofitti­ng goals.

Sanders also is calling for an overhaul of the nation's transporta­tion system by investing in electric vehicles, high-speed rail and expanded public transit. He calls for spending $526 billion in modernizin­g the electrical grid across the United States.

In his plan, Sanders notes that communitie­s of color are disproport­ionately affected by the climate emergency. He says the Green New Deal is an “opportunit­y to uproot historical injustices and inequities to advance social, racial and economic justice.”

A Northern California community ravaged last November by the state's deadliest wildfire on record will serve as the backdrop for Sanders' climate announceme­nt. Scientists and policymake­rs have blamed climate change for California's worsening wildfires, which have killed more than 100 people and destroyed tens of thousands of homes in recent years.

“Climate change is a major, major crisis for our country, and the entire world, and one of the manifestat­ions of that crisis is what happened here,” Sanders said as he toured a destroyed mobile home park in Paradise, California, alongside people who lost their homes in the blaze.

If there was any “silver lining” to the fire, Sanders said, he hoped that it would be a wake-up call to the country and the world that “bold and aggressive action” is needed on climate change.

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