Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Former Mich. Gov. Granholm to serve as energy secretary

- By Matthew Daly

WASHINGTON — Former Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm won Senate confirmati­on Thursday to be energy secretary and will be a key Cabinet member trying to fulfill President Joe Biden’s commitment for a green economy as the United States fights to slow climate change.

The vote was 64-35, with all Democrats and 14 Republican­s, including GOP leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, voting yes.

Granholm, 62, served two terms as governor in a state dominated by the auto industry and devastated by the 2008 recession.

She has promoted emerging clean energy technologi­es, such as electric vehicles and battery manufactur­ing, as an answer for jobs that will be lost as the U.S. transition­s away from oil, coal and other fossil fuels.

She tweeted her thanks to senators and said, “I’m obsessed with creating good-paying clean energy jobs in all corners of America in service of addressing our climate crisis. I’m impatient for results. Now let’s get to work!”

Sen. Joe Manchin, chair of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, said Granholm has the leadership skills, vision and compassion needed at the Energy Department to “develop innovative solutions for the climate challenge” while preserving jobs.

Granholm is committed to working every day “to ensure that we don’t leave any workers behind as we move towards a cleaner energy future,” said Manchin, D-W.Va.

During her confirmati­on hearing last month, Granholm pushed her plans to embrace new wind and solar technologi­es. But her position caused tension with some Republican­s who fear for the future of fossil fuels.

“We can buy electric car batteries from Asia, or we can make them in America,” Granholm told senators. “We can install wind turbines from Denmark, or we can make them in America.”

Wyoming Sen. John Barrasso, the top Republican on the Senate energy committee, said Biden “seems to want to pull the plug on American energy dominance. So I cannot in good conscience vote to approve his nominee for secretary of energy.”

Barrasso and other Republican­s have complained that a freeze by Biden on oil and gas leases on federal lands is taking a “sledgehamm­er” to Western states’ economies. The moratorium could cost tens of thousands of jobs unless rescinded, Barrasso said.

He and other Republican­s also bemoaned Biden’s rejection of the Keystone XL pipeline from Canada to the U.S. Gulf Coast, saying thousands of jobs will be lost. Granholm assured lawmakers that creating jobs was her top priority — and Biden’s.

“We cannot leave our people behind. In West Virginia, and in other fossil fuel states, there is an opportunit­y for us to specialize in the technologi­es that reduce carbon emissions, to make those technologi­es here, to put people to work here, and to look at other ways to diversify,” she told Manchin at her Jan. 27 hearing.

 ?? GRAEME JENNINGS/WASHINGTON EXAMINER ?? Jennifer Granholm has promoted clean energy technologi­es as an answer for jobs that will be lost as the U.S. transition­s away from fossil fuels.
GRAEME JENNINGS/WASHINGTON EXAMINER Jennifer Granholm has promoted clean energy technologi­es as an answer for jobs that will be lost as the U.S. transition­s away from fossil fuels.

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