The News Journal

Blueprint for Delaware on climate change

- Your Turn

Climate change is one of the greatest challenges any of us will face in our lifetimes, and it requires all of us to work together to help preserve the Earth and secure a sustainabl­e future for our children and grandchild­ren.

That’s why we’re proud to recognize the second anniversar­y of the Delaware Climate Action Plan, a practical playbook for our state to tackle climate change and respond to the ways it is changing our world through reducing pollution and increasing our resiliency.

The plan developed by the Department of Natural Resources and Environmen­tal Control enables us to mitigate the worst effects of climate change while we take proactive steps to get out in front of it. The plan identifies action areas for decreasing emissions while providing strategies for the state’s adapting to the effects of a warming climate.

Key emission reduction strategies include a transition to clean and renewable energy, implementi­ng energy efficiency measures, shifting to cleaner transporta­tion sources and offsetting carbon emissions by maximizing the potential of our forests and farms to store carbon. Through adaptation strategies include new or updated regulation­s, trainings, management plans, research, outreach, agency support and more.

The product of a yearlong process involving Delawarean­s from throughout the state, the Climate Action Plan is the most detailed approach we have produced so far for addressing climate change.

And make no mistake, climate change is here. Burning of coal, gas and oil means that greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide have reached record levels in our atmosphere, raising temperatur­es around the globe. The impacts of climate change differ across the globe and across Delaware, where we’re seeing more intense storms and flooding, warmer temperatur­es and sea level rise — effects expected to worsen in the coming years.

Extreme weather is threatenin­g farmers’ crops, overwhelmi­ng our infrastruc­ture and raising energy costs around the state. Climate change threatens our multibilli­on-dollar tourism and agricultur­e industries, along with the tens of thousands of jobs they support. It’s also detrimenta­l to the health of the general population, and dealing with climate change impacts poses a major risk for the financial well-being of our state and local government­s. In short, it touches nearly every area of our economy.

While climate change affects all our communitie­s, it does not do so equally. Working to assist underserve­d and overburden­ed communitie­s, which are among the hardest hit by climate change, is among the most important things we can do in Delaware. That’s why DNREC has made environmen­tal justice a focus of our work, hiring an environmen­tal justice coordinato­r to help us address issues faced by these traditiona­lly marginaliz­ed communitie­s.

Gov. John Carney has taken bold steps in 2023, signing multiple environmen­tal bills that build on what DNREC is already doing. But we’re not stopping there.

Since the Climate Action Plan was released in November 2021, we’ve launched the Tree for Every Delawarean Initiative, extended a grant program for fast electric vehicle charging stations, began a low- to moderate-income solar pilot program, and started the Climate Leadership Academy – an important initiative that educates government officials and local decisionma­kers about climate change and solutions to the problems we face.

Our Weatheriza­tion Assistance Program has already helped thousands of lower-income Delawarean­s reduce the cost of their energy bills by providing weatherstr­ipping, insulation and energy-saving light bulbs at no cost, thus making their homes more energy efficient.

Following the strategies and actions laid out in the Climate Action Plan will allow us to hit our 2025 target of reducing emissions at least 26 percent from 2005 levels and set us on a course for further emissions reductions to come.

As we work to decrease emissions, we’re also taking big steps to update our infrastruc­ture, which was built for the world of 50-plus years ago. Once-in-acentury storms have become increasing­ly common, overtaxing our pipes and flooding our roadways.

We’ll need to expand stormwater ponds, work toward making our homes more energy efficient and implement urban green areas to provide shade in a sea of concrete.

The challenges are great, but we should look at this as an opportunit­y to innovate, to transition our economy away from greenhouse gases and other harmful effects, to let the small but mighty state of Delaware become a leader in tackling climate change. Our size lets us be nimble, responding quickly with all hands on deck while being flexible and innovative. It’s one of our greatest strengths and is something that heartens me as I think about the challenges we face.

Climate change is perhaps the main threat of the 21st century. Working together, we can make sure we respond in a way that avoids the worst impacts of it.

Shawn Garvin is cabinet secretary for the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmen­tal Control.

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 ?? JASON MINTO/THE NEWS JOURNAL ?? Snow geese fly over a farm field near Prime Hook National Wildlife Refuge in Milton.
JASON MINTO/THE NEWS JOURNAL Snow geese fly over a farm field near Prime Hook National Wildlife Refuge in Milton.

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