Energy

House climate panel chair: 'We just don't have any more time to waste'


Rep. Kathy CastorKatherine (Kathy) Anne CastorSenators gear up for bipartisan grilling of Facebook execs Overnight Energy & Environment — Presented by the American Petroleum Institute — Manchin expresses his misgivings Pelosi says it would be a ‘dereliction of duty’ if infrastructure goes in ‘wrong direction’ on climate MORE (D-Fla.), the chairwoman of the select committee on the climate crisis, is sounding the alarm regarding climate change in the U.S., contending that Democrats must pass their multi-trillion-dollar reconciliation bill because “we don’t have any more time to waste.”

Castor, during an interview with The Guardian published on Thursday, said the U.S has to “act now” on climate change “or else we’re condemning our children and future generations to a really horrendous time.”

President BidenJoe Biden White House: US has donated 200 million COVID-19 vaccines around the world Police recommend charges against four over Sinema bathroom protest K Street revenues boom MORE, who is slated to attend an international climate summit in Glasgow later this month, has made combating climate change a key focus of his administration, vowing to cut emissions in half by 2030.

Congressional Democrats are now looking to achieve part of Biden’s climate goals in its multi-trillion dollar reconciliation package, but internal party disagreements may stymie those efforts.

The Clean Electricity Payment Program, a major initiative that would incentivize utilities to transition to clean sources of energy through grants and fines, will likely be removed from the reconciliation package because of opposition from moderate Sen. Joe ManchinJoe ManchinK Street revenues boom Biden champions economic plan as Democrats scale back ambitions On The Money — Democrats eye tough choices as deadline looms MORE (D-W.Va.).

The program, which seeks to cut emissions from U.S. electricity production by 80 percent before the decade ends, is considered one of the most central provisions in the package’s efforts to address climate change.

Castor told The Guardian that this past summer, which was marked by heatwaves, wildfires and hurricanes, made Americans aware of the threat posed by climate change.

“When you have farmers whose crops or livestock have been flooded out or dropping from an extreme heat, or wildfires are burning through your town, or your electric grid isn’t resilient and people die in Texas because of a cold snap, that’s a wake-up call,” Castor said.

“And I think now people are really looking at policymakers and asking, ‘What are you going to do about it?’ ” she added.

The Florida Democrat did, however, say that passage of the reconciliation package will not be enough for the country to achieve its climate goals.

“We’ll have a lot more to do,” Castor said. Even if we pass the Build Back Better Act as it is, that doesn’t really get us to net zero by 2050, which is the goal.”

The climate crisis panel chairwoman predicted that as time progresses more Republicans will support climate initiatives, specifically pointing to the jobs they will create.

“As clean energy grows in districts across the country, you’ll see more Republicans finally understanding it creates jobs and is less costly for the folks they represent,” Castor said.

“That’s kind of the only pathway out of the trap they’ve gotten themselves into – to talk about climate but not do anything about it,” she added.





READ NEWS SOURCE

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you accept our use of cookies.