The Arizona Republic

Business leaders urge Biden to set ambitious climate goal

- Matthew Daly

WASHINGTON – More than 300 businesses and investors, including such giants as Apple, Google, Microsoft and Coca-Cola, are calling on the Biden administra­tion to set an ambitious climate change goal that would cut U.S. greenhouse gas emissions by at least 50% below 2005 levels by 2030.

The target would nearly double the nation’s previous commitment and require dramatic changes in the power, transporta­tion and other sectors. President Joe Biden is considerin­g options for expected carbon reductions by 2030 before a virtual climate summit the U.S. is hosting later this month.

The so-called Nationally Determined

Contributi­on is a key milestone as Biden moves toward his goal of netzero carbon emissions by 2050. Biden promised to reveal the nonbinding but symbolical­ly important 2030 goal before the Earth Day summit opens April 22.

“A bold 2030 target is needed to catalyze a zero-emissions future, spur a robust economic recovery, create millions of well-paying jobs and allow the U.S. to ‘build back better’ from the pandemic,” the businesses and investors said in a letter to Biden.

“New investment in clean energy, energy efficiency and clean transporta­tion can build a strong, more equitable and more inclusive American economy,” they wrote. The letter was organized by the “We Mean Business” coalition, a group of companies that support action to accelerate the transition to a carbon-free economy.

An ambitious 2030 target would guide the federal government’s approach to sustainabl­e and resilient infrastruc­ture, as well as zero-emissions vehicles and buildings, and “would inspire other industrial­ized nations to set bold targets of their own,” the group wrote.

Besides the tech and consumer products giants, companies with major energy holdings, including Exelon, General Electric, PG&E and Edison Internatio­nal, also signed the letter.

Dozens of European lawmakers, business executives and union leaders on Tuesday also urged the U.S. to slash its greenhouse gas emissions in half in the coming decade. They called for a trans-Atlantic alliance to tackle climate change and achieve a “just and sustainabl­e transition” toward a lowcarbon economy.

The letter from U.S. business leaders to the Democratic president comes as fissures between corporate America and the Republican Party have opened over the GOP’s embrace of conspiracy theories and rejection of mainstream climate science, as well as its dismissal of the 2020 election outcome.

The most recent flashpoint was in Georgia, where a new Republican­backed law restrictin­g voting rights drew harsh criticism from Delta Air Lines and Coca-Cola, whose headquarte­rs are in the state, and resulted in Major League Baseball pulling the 2021 All-Star Game from Atlanta.

More than 100 business leaders participat­ed in a Zoom call last weekend to discuss how to oppose Republican-backed proposals across the country that could limit voting. Options include stopping political donations and holding off in investment­s in states that approve the laws.

On climate, the business leaders told Biden they “applaud your administra­tion’s demonstrat­ed commitment to address climate change head-on, and we stand in support of your efforts.”

Millions of Americans are already feeling the impacts of climate change, they wrote, citing the severe winter storm that caused blackouts in Texas and other states, deadly wildfires in California and record-breaking hurricanes in the Southeast and Gulf Coast.

“The human and economic losses of the past 12 months alone are profound,” they wrote. “Tragically, these devastatin­g climate impacts also disproport­ionately hit marginaliz­ed and low-income communitie­s who are least able to withstand them. We must act now to slow and turn the tide.”

While Biden has reentered the U.S into the Paris climate accord and made climate action a pillar of his presidency, more action is needed, the business leaders said. “An effective national climate strategy will require all of us,” they told Biden, but “you alone can set the course by swiftly establishi­ng a bold U.S. 2030 target.”

In a related developmen­t, Apple became the first major U.S. publicly traded company to endorse regulatory action by the Securities and Exchange Commission mandating disclosure of climate-related informatio­n to investors. Apple has made such disclosure­s for the past decade but said the SEC should make the disclosure­s mandatory.

“We’re determined to do our part to fight climate change & believe transparen­cy is an important part of this,” Apple vice president Lisa Jackson said Tuesday in a tweet. “We believe other companies should do the same,” added Jackson, a former administra­tor of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

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