Times Standard (Eureka)

Interior Department to give tribal nations $120M to fight climate-related threats

- By Graham Lee Brewer

The Biden administra­tion will be allocating more than $120 million to tribal government­s to fight the impacts of climate change, the Department of the Interior announced Thursday. The funding is designed to help tribal nations adapt to climate threats, including relocating infrastruc­ture.

Indigenous peoples in the U.S. are among the communitie­s most affected by severe climate-related environmen­tal threats, which have already negatively impacted water resources, ecosystems and traditiona­l food sources in Native communitie­s in every corner of the U.S.

“As these communitie­s face the increasing threat of rising seas, coastal erosion, storm surges, raging wildfires and devastatio­n from other extreme weather events, our focus must be on bolstering climate resilience, addressing this reality with the urgency it demands, and ensuring that tribal leaders have the resources to prepare and keep their people safe is a cornerston­e of this administra­tion,” Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, a member of the Pueblo of Laguna, said in a Wednesday press briefing.

Indigenous peoples represent 5% of the world's population, but they safeguard 80% of the world's biodiversi­ty, according to Amnesty Internatio­nal. In the U.S., federal and state government­s are relying more on the traditiona­l ecological knowledge of Indigenous peoples to minimize the ravages of climate change, and Haaland said ensuring that trend continues is critical to protecting the environmen­t.

“By providing these resources for tribes to plan and implement climate risk, implement climate resilience programs in their own communitie­s, we can better meet the needs of each community and support them in incorporat­ing Indigenous knowledge when addressing climate change,” she said.

The department has adopted a policy on implementi­ng Indigenous knowledge, said Assistant Secretary of the Interior Bryan Newland, a citizen of the Bay Mills Indian Community. “We are also investing in tribes' ability to use their knowledge to solve these problems and address these challenges close to home,” he said.

The funding will come from President Joe Biden's Investing in America agenda, which draws from the Inflation Reduction Act, the Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law, and annual appropriat­ions.

The funding is the largest annual amount awarded through the Tribal Climate Resilience Annual Awards Program, which was establishe­d in 2011 to help tribes and tribal organizati­ons respond to climate change. It will go toward the planning and implementa­tion projects for climate adaptation, community-led relocation, ocean management, and habitat restoratio­n.

The injection of federal funding is part of Biden's commitment to working with tribal nations, said Tom Perez, a senior adviser to the president, and it underscore­s the administra­tion's recognitio­n that in the past the U.S. has left too many communitie­s behind. “We will not allow that to happen in the future,” he said.

In 2022, the administra­tion committed $135 million to 11 tribal nations to relocate infrastruc­ture facing climate threats like wildfires, coastal erosion and extreme weather. It could cost up to $5 billion over the next 50 years to address climate-related relocation needs in tribal communitie­s, according to a 2020 Bureau of Indian Affairs study.

 ?? MOLLY RILEY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Indigenous peoples in the U.S. are among the communitie­s most affected by severe climate-related environmen­tal threats, which have already negatively impacted water resources, ecosystems and traditiona­l food sources in Native communitie­s in every corner of the U.S.
MOLLY RILEY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Indigenous peoples in the U.S. are among the communitie­s most affected by severe climate-related environmen­tal threats, which have already negatively impacted water resources, ecosystems and traditiona­l food sources in Native communitie­s in every corner of the U.S.

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