Biden unveils sweeping climate goal — and plans
to meet it even if Congress won't
It's a goal the White House insists the U.S. can meet
even if Congress rejects Biden's calls for trillions of dollars in green
infrastructure spending.
By ZACK
COLMAN and ERIC WOLFF
04/22/2021
06:01 AM EDT
Updated:
04/22/2021 10:25 AM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/04/22/biden-climate-goal-congress-484141
President
Joe Biden pledged Thursday to slash U.S. emissions of greenhouse gases in at
least half by 2030 — an ambitious target that will require retooling the
world's largest economy in an effort to put the U.S. at the forefront of the
international campaign to slow climate change.
It's a goal
the White House insists the U.S. can meet even if Congress rejects Biden's
calls for trillions of dollars in green infrastructure spending.
The new
target embodies one of Biden's top policy priorities and represents a stark
shift from the Trump administration, which had dismissed the threats posed by
climate change and rejected the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement as a plot to
hobble the U.S. economy. In contrast, Biden has made reducing carbon dioxide
from fossil fuels a core part of his $2.2 trillion infrastructure plan and
called for putting the U.S. on a path to eliminating net greenhouse gas
pollution by mid-century.
Thursday's
announcement came ahead the White House's two-day virtual climate summit with
40 world leaders. Biden's target calls for cutting U.S. carbon dioxide output
by 50 to 52 percent compared with 2005 levels — a far more aggressive goal than
the one former President Barack Obama proposed half a decade ago.
In his
opening remarks to the summit — which, like many pandemic-driven virtual
events, were initially marred by technical difficulties with the livestream
audio — Biden echoed his domestic arguments that fighting climate change would
be an economic boon for the countries that embraced new technologies.
"Those
that do take action and make bold investments in their people in a clean energy
future will win the good jobs of tomorrow and make their economies more
resilient and more competitive. So let's run that race," he said, adding
later "this is a moral imperative, an economic imperative. A moment of
peril but also a moment of extraordinary possibilities."
Leaders of
several nations welcomed the U.S. back into the global climate diplomacy realm
in their remarks early Thursday, stressing the international collaboration was
needed to address the global problem.
Chinese
Premier Xi Jinping, who was the first leader to speak after Biden, used his
address to defend Beijing's record on climate change, even as the country that
is the world's largest greenhouse gas emitter comes under pressure to move
faster to reach carbon neutrality than the 2060 target it has set.
"China
has committed to move from carbon peak to carbon neutrality in a much shorter
time span than what might take many developed countries, and that required
extraordinarily hard efforts from China," Xi told the summit.
And he
pledged for the first time to begin reducing coal consumption by the middle of
the decade in the country that is the world's largest user of the
planet-warming fuel. "We will strictly control coal-fired power generation
projects. We will strictly limit the increase in coal consumption over the 14th
Five-Year period and phase it down in the 15th Five-Year period," he said,
referring the next economic planning period that begins in 2026.
For the
U.S., after more than two decades of policy reversals on climate change, the
U.S. will face skepticism in convincing the world it can follow through on the
goal, especially given the long odds Biden's infrastructure and climate
proposal — the American Jobs Plan — faces in passing the narrowly divided
Congress. Administration officials contend that their 2030 target is achievable
without enacting that plan through legislation.
Many
experts doubt whether hitting the climate marks is feasible without enacting
significant portions of that infrastructure and jobs plan.
“That is, I
guess we could say, the $2 trillion question,” said Dan Lashof, director of
think tank the World Resources Institute.
Administration
officials told reporters in a Wednesday briefing that they saw multiple
pathways to achieving the climate goal outside of the infrastructure package as
currently crafted.
Ali Zaidi,
the deputy White House national climate adviser, said at a separate Wednesday
event that the plummeting costs of renewable energy that have helped reduce
emissions — even under the coal-promoting Trump administration — as well as the
climate efforts by cities, states and major companies, have shown steep
reductions are possible.
“The trend
towards the utilization of clean energy technology around the world is both
steep and secular,” Zaidi said.
Environmental
groups have produced reams of reports and analyses arguing that emissions cuts
of 50 percent by 2030 are both necessary and achievable, but practically all of
them call for congressional action to speed the adoption of clean energy. That
could be in the form of legally mandated emissions targets, a clean energy
standard that requires adoption of green energy, or direct spending to
eliminate carbon pollution.
“I think it
would be basically impossible to achieve the proposed [target] with executive
authority alone, both in terms of investment and regulation,” said Alex
Trembath, deputy director at the Breakthrough Institute, a progressive think
tank focused on environment and humanitarian problems.
"I’m
sure there are things the administration can do on the margins, but for the
ambition they’re announcing, I can’t see it happening without legislation,” he
added.
RMI,
formerly the Rocky Mountain Institute, a clean energy think tank, worried that
without federal mandates, the patchwork of state policies would not be adequate
to make up for shortfalls in executive authority to slash emissions.
“The answer
to the question of whether the White House can achieve such a goal alone is
almost certainly no,” said Mark Dyson, a principal with the carbon-free
electricity practice at RMI. “It is very unlikely that this goal could be
achieved without new federal legislation. Currently, many of the key rules and
regulations are done at the state level. While some states have aggressive
policies, they are not uniform or aggressive enough to meet the [goal]."
But other
progressives are more optimistic, including Christy Goldfuss, head of energy
and environmental policy at the progressive Center for American Progress and a
former Obama White House official.
“Yes, the
Biden administration can be successful in setting the U.S. on a path to
achieving its ambitious goal without Congress,” Goldfuss said. “The
administration has already committed to taking a whole-of-government approach
to addressing climate. However, the U.S. Congress’ partnership with the Biden
administration would certainly hasten the transition to a clean future.”
It’s
unclear whether the infrastructure plan could pass through an evenly split
Senate — much less a key climate element of the plan: a clean electricity
standard that would sharply ratchet down emissions.
High-ranking
Biden officials have publicly championed the jobs and infrastructure package as
essential for reshaping the power grid, transportation sector, buildings and
industry in a climate-friendly fashion.
“We've
delayed so long, it's really urgent that we move now, and it's got to be action
on multiple fronts,” former National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
leader Jane Lubchenco, now a top White House climate adviser, told POLITICO.
Because of
that uncertainty around whether Biden's new goals are feasible, many countries
attending the two-day summit are taking a wait-and-see approach before
increasing their own ambitions, although Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
increased Canada's target to a 40 to 45 percent reduction compared with 2005
levels by 2030.
And
following recent pressure from the U.S., South Korean President Moon Jae-In
promised that his nation would cease all public financing for overseas
coal-fired power plants, eliminating one of the last major international
sources of money for the fuel. Japan, however, which has also drawn U.S.
pressure, did not announce such a measure.
The fact
that any country was prepared to make new commitments so early in Biden's term
reflects the considerable energy that special climate envoy John Kerry devoted
to the campaign in recent weeks. The summit also represents a shift in the
balance of climate diplomacy, as shown by the United States' ability to convene
world leaders to discuss climate change outside the formal international
process for addressing the issue, which will continue in November at a
conference in Glasgow, Scotland.
“They
clearly created a lot more momentum for [the Glasgow talks] than even I
expected,” said Jake Schmidt, senior strategic director for international
climate with the Natural Resources Defense Council.
Many
members of the Biden Cabinet are participating in the two-day summit, including
Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, Defense
Secretary Lloyd Austin, Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm, Interior Secretary
Deb Haaland, EPA Administrator Michael Regan and national climate adviser Gina
McCarthy — the former Obama administration EPA chief who is coordinating much
of Biden's strategy.
The new
U.S. climate change goal, known in the parlance of the Paris Climate Agreement
as a "nationally determined commitment," is the centerpiece for the
event. Each nation under the agreement is required to issue an NDC, but there
are no requirements on how stringent such pledges must be. The only mandate is
that the plans aim to prevent rising global temperatures from crossing a
tipping point of 2 degrees Celsius — and, ideally, 1.5 degrees Celsius — above
pre-industrial levels.
Biden’s
number nearly doubles the carbon-cutting goal President Obama set, which
committed the U.S. to curbing greenhouse gases 26 to 28 percent below 2005
levels by 2025.
The U.S. is
close to meeting Obama's goal. But reaching the new target seems implausible
without extra authority and spending from Congress, said Robbie Orvis, director
of energy policy design with the think tank Energy Innovation.
“We have to
push on the sectors where the technologies are readily available,” he said,
adding that the clean electricity standard Biden has proposed is a “linchpin”
to any credible plan to halve emissions in a decade. That idea envisions
curbing power sector emissions 80 percent by 2035 and eliminating them entirely
by 2050, and has earned the backing of the electric utility industry.
“Being able
to say this isn’t just President Biden’s wish list — you have big U.S.
businesses that are the core of U.S. manufacturing calling for similar targets
— that can create momentum in Congress and for selling it abroad,” he said.
Nathan
Hultman, who worked on the Obama climate pledge, said he saw multiple paths to
reach the goal Biden set — even if the administration was forced to rely
primarily on executive actions and measures like tax credits. The Obama goal,
he noted, had underestimated how quickly clean technology costs would plummet,
how cities, states and counties would act, and how the broad shift in public
opinion would contribute to cutting emissions.
“Those are
the things that I would say to other world leaders if they come back and say,
‘Well, why should we think that this time is different?’” said Hultman, who is
now director of the Center for Global Sustainability at the University of
Maryland. “The answer is, it is actually different.”
Michael
Grunwald contributed to this report.


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