The Commercial Appeal

Enticing Americans to buy green is next hurdle

Biden, White House facing an uphill battle

- Chris Megerian, Hannah Fingerhut and Matthew Daly

WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden persuaded Democrats in Congress to provide hundreds of billions of dollars to fight climate change. Now comes another formidable task: enticing Americans to buy millions of electric cars, heat pumps, solar panels and more efficient appliances.

It’s a public relations challenge that could determine whether the country meets Biden’s ambitious goal to cut greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030.

Relying on tax credits and rebates made the climate legislatio­n – it was approved in August with only Democratic votes – more politicall­y palatable than regulation­s that force wholesale changes in polluting industries.

But it also means the administra­tion’s battle against global warming will be waged “one household at a time,” said Shannon Baker-branstette­r, who works on energy issues at the Center for American Progress, a liberal think tank closely aligned with the White House.

“It is very incrementa­l,” she said. “So it requires a very sophistica­ted communicat­ions strategy.”

Biden acknowledg­ed the hurdle during a recent Cabinet meeting as he talked about the incentives that are becoming available this year.

“Folks need to know how to take advantage of these benefits that we passed. That’s on all of us around the table here to make sure we get that message out clearly,” he said.

The White House says it is piecing together a plan to partner with state government­s, contractor­s, retailers and social media influencer­s to get the word out. “Lowering utility bills is going to be a key driver,” said Josh Peck, a senior policy adviser on clean energy issues.

It’s also collaborat­ing with Rewiring America, a nonprofit focused on ways to electrify homes and businesses, and companies like Airbnb, Redfin and Lyft. As part of the effort, Rewiring America created an online calculator that shows what credits or rebates homeowners might be eligible for, depending on their ZIP code and income.

Buying a heat pump or installing solar panels is “a major expense line and a major opportunit­y for savings,” said Ari Matusiak, the group’s founder and CEO. “So it’s really important to make sure people are aware of the resources they have available and the benefits they can unlock in terms of bringing energy bill

savings.”

Polling shows that while Americans support action to slow climate change, they are broadly unaware of the Inflation Reduction Act, the massive legislatio­n that includes financial incentives to lower emissions, and skeptical of their own role in the climate crisis.

An AP-NORC poll released in September, one month after the law was signed, found that 61% of U.S. adults said they knew little to nothing about the legislatio­n. And despite the multibilli­on-dollar investment in climate solutions, only a third said it would help climate change; about half said it wouldn’t make a difference.

Majorities of U.S. adults said they are unlikely to install solar panels or buy an electric vehicle in the next three years, according to the AP-NORC poll. Among those, at least half said financial incentives would not make a difference in their decision.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP ?? Buying a heat pump is “a major expense line and a major opportunit­y for savings,” said Ari Matusiak, Rewiring America’s CEO.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP Buying a heat pump is “a major expense line and a major opportunit­y for savings,” said Ari Matusiak, Rewiring America’s CEO.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States