As oceans rise, Democrats put all hands on deck for climate change
WASHINGTON — As the 117th Congress enters its second month and the Biden administration fills out its Cabinet, Democrats in the executive and legislative branches of the federal government are in agreement that climate change deserves swift attention and in alignment that legislation to support the transition from fossil to clean energy is a good place to begin.
Even Biden’s nominees for director of national intelligence, secretary of agriculture, secretary of treasury and deputy defense secretary, not traditionally posts with ecological focuses, described climate change as a critical issue.
If there was doubt the Senate under Democratic control would approach climate change as an all-hand-ondesk threat, Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., aimed to lay it to rest on Feb. 3, calling the warming globe “the existential threat of our time.”
“We’re finally seeing a focus on the climate issue at the highest level of our politics,” Flannery Winchester, communications director for Citizens’ Climate Lobby, a nonpartisan organization that prods Congress to tax carbon emissions, said in an interview. “I think that this year and this session of Congress are really crucial because it seems more likely than ever that major policy is going to move forward on climate.”
On his first day in office, Biden set the U.S. on track to rejoin the Paris climate agreement of 2015, directed federal agencies to review more than 100 environmental decisions and agency moves from the Trump administration, and revoked a permit for the Keystone XL pipeline.
A week later, on Jan. 27 Biden announced a moratorium on fossil fuel extraction leases on federal lands, issued a memo on scientific integrity and announced the
creation of the Civil Climate Corps, styled after the Depression-era Civil Conservation Corps work program.
“Just like we need a unified national response to COVID-19, we desperately need a unified national response to the climate crisis,” Biden said.
Republicans responded with bills to protect Keystone and block federal freezes on fossil energy leasing. They also pointed to projected job losses from Biden’s moves, saying halting individual projects doesn’t matter in the grand scope of a warming planet.
“Any reason to believe that that executive order by President Biden is going to reduce the amount of oil and gas that the world will consume?” Sen. John Barrasso, R-wyo., asked Mark Mills of the conservative Manhattan Institute.
“There’s no reason to believe that will happen,” Mills replied.
The president has more in the works. After Congress considers the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package this week, Democrats are expected to introduce an infrastructure bill that will include a focus on transportation systems that release little or no greenhouse gases.
Biden singled out Rep. Peter A. Defazio, D-ore., chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, at a White House meeting last Friday.
“Even before any of us spoke and even before the president addressed us, when we sat down he said to Peter, ‘you’re next,’ before anything else,” said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-calif.
Jamal Raad, co-founder and executive director of Evergreen Action, said in an interview he expects the next piece of legislation following the COVID-19 relief bill to be an infrastructure bill that contains renewable energy facets, including a national clean electricity standard.
“I have been really excited about Leader Schumer’s focus on climate,” said Raad, a former staffer to Gov. Jay Inslee, D-wash., who ran for president with climate policy at the core of his agenda. Schumer has talked about climate change as a priority for more than a year, Raad noted. “He’s really put his words into action.”
Biden ran for president on the goal of getting all electricity in America to be carbonfree by 2035 — a proposal known as a “clean energy standard,” a term that generally refers to the government setting goals to derive a certain percentage of electricity from zero-emission sources by a set date.
While Sen. Joe Manchin III, D-W.VA., a swing vote and Senate Energy and Natural Resources chairman, said Thursday he opposes a carbon tax, he has indicated he is open to a clean energy standard. Sen. Tina Smith, D-minn., introduced a clean energy standard bill last Congress that did not get a vote in committee.
A few hours after he reached an agreement with Sen. Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., the minority leader, Schumer said last week he had directed the incoming heads of “all relevant committees” to hold hearings on the “climate crisis,” which he lamented the Senate long sidestepped: “This Democratic majority will compel the Senate to forcefully, relentlessly and urgently address climate change.”