Houston Chronicle

CEOs call for much deeper emissions cut

As GOP frets over jobs, climate change issues prompt rare letter to Biden by big businesses

- By Lisa Friedman

“I think this signals a major shift in the corporate community’s understand­ing of the urgency of climate change as a systemic financial risk.”

Anne Kelly, VP at sustainabi­lity nonprofit Ceres

WASHINGTON — More than 300 businesses, including Google, McDonald’s and Walmart, are pushing the Biden administra­tion to nearly double the United States’ target for cuts to planet-warming emissions before an April 22 global summit on climate change.

In a letter to President Joe Biden, CEOs from some of the nation’s largest companies called on the administra­tion to set a new Paris Agreement goal of slashing the nation’s carbon dioxide, methane and other planet-warming emissions at least 50 percent below 2005 levels by 2030.

That is roughly what most major environmen­tal groups want, and the corporate executives called the target “ambitious and attainable.”

Former President Donald Trump pulled the United States out of the Paris Agreement, eradicatin­g emissions reduction targets set by the Obama administra­tion that many environmen­talists had seen as too weak. President Barack Obama had pledged to cut national emissions 26 percent to 28 percent below 2005 levels by 2025.

With Biden promising to tackle climate change intensely, climate change activists are watching to see how much more ambitious his targets will be than those set when he was vice president. Biden, who returned the U.S. to the Paris Agreement on Inaugurati­on Day, has said the U.S. will announce fresh targets for the Paris Agreement on or before a virtual summit of world leaders he is hosting around Earth Day next week.

According to two administra­tion officials familiar with the deliberati­ons, the target is expected to be a range that will include a 50 percent reduction in emissions.

Organizers of the business letter said they hoped such a message coming from the private sector — including electric utilities like Exelon and Pacific Gas & Electric, as well as dozens of companies based in Republican districts — would resonate strongly with Congress. Other signators include Target, Verizon and Philip Morris, the tobacco giant once considered a firm ally of the Republican Party.

The effort also underscore­s the delicate path corporate leaders are treading in the postTrump era. Their decisions to break with Republican­s on issues like voting rights and racial justice have rankled their traditiona­l allies in the GOP. Pressing the Biden administra­tion to aggressive­ly combat climate change could further alienate Republican­s, who have long fought emissions regulation­s as “job killers” that would make American business less competitiv­e.

“I think this signals a major shift in the corporate community’s understand­ing of the urgency of climate change as a systemic financial risk,” said Anne Kelly, vice president for government affairs at the sustainabi­lity nonprofit Ceres, which organized the letter.

Republican lawmakers have given no indication they are likely to be swayed, but they framed their opposition as a defense of consumers, not businesses.

“The Paris climate agreement will result in increased energy costs for Americans while Russia and China increase greenhouse gas emissions,” Sen. John Barrasso of Wyoming said in a statement. He predicted whatever target Biden announces will be “punishing.”

Patrick Flynn, vice president

of sustainabi­lity for Salesforce, which signed on to the letter, said he hopes businesses will lobby Congress to support the Biden administra­tion’s target.

“We know it will create millions of jobs, we know it’s a good thing for the economy, and we know if we do it right we can do it in a way that leaves no one behind,” he said.

Ralph Izzo, president and chair of the Public Service Enterprise

Group, a New Jersey-based energy company, said he is supporting the 50 percent target because he has seen the consequenc­es of climate change in his state.

“It’s critical that we take significan­t action against the threat,” he said.

The corporate response is all the more remarkable because Biden’s plan for curbing climate change would be paid for in large part by raising corporate tax rates, a move sure to raise objections among at least some of the climate-conscious corporatio­ns. He also has called for a clean electricit­y standard and promised new regulation­s on the utility sector, automobile makers and oil and gas industries.

Flynn said his company has supported tax increases in the past and called Biden’s $2 trillion infrastruc­ture proposal “a good investment” for the long term. Other companies that signed on to the letter sidesteppe­d questions about the tax plan.

Kelley said she believes companies can “decouple” the commitment­s the U.S. needs to make to curb climate change with difference­s they may have with the administra­tion around how to pay for it. “I think they see that as a separate set of negotiatio­ns,” she said.

Under the Paris Agreement, nearly 200 nations set their own voluntary targets for cutting emissions by 2025, including major developing nations like China and India. The rules of the accord do not punish countries for failing to meet the goals, but do require countries to set them.

The U.S. is currently less than halfway to its original goal.

Concentrat­ions of atmospheri­c carbon dioxide continue to rise. According to a recent measuremen­t taken at the Mauna Loa Observator­y in Hawaii, concentrat­ions recently topped 420 parts per million for the first time since levels have been recorded.

 ?? Brandon Thibodeauz / New York Times ?? Some of the largest companies in the U.S. are calling for doubling of targets for cutting planet-warming emissions, slashing carbon dioxide, methane and other gases at least 50 percent below 2005 levels by 2030.
Brandon Thibodeauz / New York Times Some of the largest companies in the U.S. are calling for doubling of targets for cutting planet-warming emissions, slashing carbon dioxide, methane and other gases at least 50 percent below 2005 levels by 2030.

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