Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Biden puts US back into fight to slow global warming

- By Ellen Knickmeyer and Seth Borenstein

WASHINGTON » President Joe Biden planned Wednesday to return the United States to the worldwide fight to slow global warming in one of his first official acts, and to immediatel­y launch a series of climatefri­endly efforts that would transform how Americans drive and get their power.

“A cry for survival comes from the planet itself,” Biden said in his inaugural address. “A cry that can’t be any more desperate or any more clear now.”

Biden was to sign an executive order rejoining the Paris climate accord within hours of taking the oath of office, fulfilling a campaign pledge. The move undoes the U.S. withdrawal ordered by predecesso­r Donald Trump, who belittled the science behind climate efforts, loosened regulation­s on heat-trapping oil, gas and coal emissions, and spurred oil and gas leasing in pristine Arctic tundra and other wilderness.

The Paris accord commits 195 countries and other signatorie­s to come up with a goal to reduce carbon pollution and monitor and report their fossil fuel emissions. The United States is the world’s No. 2 carbon emitter after China.

Biden’s move will solidify political will globally, former U.N. SecretaryG­eneral Ban Ki-moon said Wednesday.

“Not a single country in this world, however powerful, however resourcefu­l one may be, can do it alone,” said Ban, speaking virtually at a briefing in the Netherland­s for an upcoming Climate Adaptation Summit. “We have to put all our hands on the deck. That is the lesson, very difficult lesson, which we have learned during last year,” as Trump made good on his pledge to pull out of the global accord.

Biden also will use executive orders to start undoing other Trump climate rollbacks. He will order a temporary moratorium on new oil and gas leasing in what had been virgin Arctic wilderness, direct federal agencies to start looking at tougher mileage standards and other emission limits again, and revoke Trump’s approval for the Keystone XL oil and gas pipeline.

Another first-day order directs agencies to consider the impact on climate, disadvanta­ged communitie­s, and on future generation­s from any regulatory action that affects fossil fuel emissions, a new requiremen­t. Human-caused climate change has been linked to worsening natural disasters, including wildfires, droughts, flooding and hurricanes.

However, there was no immediate word on when Biden would make good on another climate campaign pledge, one banning new oil and gas leasing on federal land.

After Biden notifies the U.N. by letter of his intention to rejoin the Paris accord, it would become effective in 30 days, U.N. spokesman Alex Saier said.

Rejoining the Paris accords could put the U.S. on track to cutting carbon dioxide emissions by 40% to 50% by 2030, experts said.

“There’s a lot we can do because we’ve left so much on the table over the last four years,” said Kate Larsen, former deputy director of the White House Council on Environmen­tal Quality under the Obama administra­tion.

Biden has promised that the needed transforma­tions of the U.S. transporta­tion and power sectors, and other changes, will mean millions of jobs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States