Current:Home > MarketsStimulus Bill Is Laden With Climate Provisions, Including a Phasedown of Chemical Super-Pollutants-VaTradeCoin
Stimulus Bill Is Laden With Climate Provisions, Including a Phasedown of Chemical Super-Pollutants
View Date:2025-01-09 11:17:04
In what Senate leaders are hailing as the single biggest victory in the fight against climate change to pass the U.S. Congress in a decade, Democratic and Republican lawmakers approved bipartisan legislation that will dramatically reduce greenhouse gas emissions and further provide incentives for renewable energy developments.
The climate provisions were contained in a sweeping $900 billion pandemic stimulus bill that passed late Monday night. The legislation provides billions of dollars in research and development funds for renewable energy and energy storage initiatives. It also extends key tax credits for wind and solar power projects.
Among the bill’s significant climate provisions is a mandatory phasedown of hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), chemical refrigerants used in air conditioners and refrigerators that are hundreds to thousands of times more effective at warming the planet than carbon dioxide.
“It’s a big step,” said David Doniger, director of the climate and clean energy program with the Natural Resources Defense Council, in reference to ongoing efforts to fight climate change. “It doesn’t get you to the goal line, but it keeps you on the field.”
The phasedown will require reductions in HFC production and use in the United States by 85 percent over the next 15 years. The reductions are similar to those required as a part of a larger international agreement that will reduce additional global warming by as much as 0.5 degrees Celsius by the end of the century.
The international agreement, known as the Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol, was negotiated in 2016 with strong backing from John Kerry, then U.S. Secretary of State, who was recently appointed climate envoy to the Biden Administration.
More than 120 countries have already signed the amendment, but three of the largest HFC producers and consumers, the United States, China and India, have yet to ratify the agreement.
“To make it work, all the big countries have to be involved,” Doniger said, noting that China and India have both started the transition away from HFCs but are waiting for the U.S. to formally ratify the agreement before doing the same.
Durwood Zaelke, president of the Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development, said the legislation is a key step in reducing “short-lived climate pollutants”—things like methane and black carbon that cause tremendous warming but only remain in the atmosphere for a relatively short period of time.
“Cutting these climate pollutants in the next decade can cut the rate of climate warming by half, a critical strategy for keeping the planet safe as countries pursue the goals of net zero climate emissions by 2050,” Zaelke said in a written statement.
The HFC phase down legislation gained broad support among Republicans at the urging of U.S. chemical manufacturers who have developed hydrofluoroolefins (HFOs), a new generation of synthetic chemicals with lower global warming potentials.
HFOs can be blended with HFCs to produce low global warming potential refrigerants that are only several hundred times more potent than carbon dioxide as a greenhouse gas, as opposed to HFCs alone, which are in the high hundreds to thousands of times more potent than carbon dioxide.
A 2018 report by two U.S. air conditioning and chemical manufacturing industry trade groups found that by 2027, the Kigali amendment would increase U.S. manufacturing jobs by 33,000 and increase U.S. exports by $5 billion by requiring the manufacturers to produce new refrigerants.
Mark Roberts, an environmental consultant at ECO Policy Advisors and the former senior counsel for the Environmental Investigation Agency, a non-profit environmental organization, praised the legislation, but said it is not enough to rapidly reduce greenhouse gas emissions from refrigerants.
Alternative refrigerants that are much less potent as greenhouse gases already exist but have been largely sidelined from the U.S. market. Propane, for example, a promising refrigerant for air conditioning, is only 3 times more potent as a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide.
Roberts said consumer and industrial safety standards, which will play a leading role in determining what alternative refrigerants can be used in place of HFCs, need to be updated.
A recent Inside Climate News investigation found that an effort funded by the United Nations to encourage the production of propane-based air conditioners in China has been stymied by restrictive U.S. safety standards established by UL, formerly known as Underwriters Laboratories, which the U.N. suggests are biased in favor of U.S. chemical manufacturers.
“Safety standards need to be changed to allow U.S. companies to develop the next generation of AC [air conditioning] and refrigeration technologies,” Roberts said. “Hydrocarbons, CO2, ammonia, air and water all have been proven safe, effective, and energy efficient in various AC and refrigeration applications. Consumer and industrial standards need to be updated so that they do not hamper American creativity or impede the production of all possible AC and refrigeration technologies.”
UL, a private U.S. company that sets consumer safety standards, declined a request to comment but said recently that “as technology continues to advance, we continue to revise our standards not only to keep people safe but also to protect our planet as we live out our mission to make the world a safer, more secure and sustainable place.”
veryGood! (169)
Related
- Prosecutor failed to show that Musk’s $1M-a-day sweepstakes was an illegal lottery, judge says
- Justice Department announces nearly $80 million to help communities fight violent crime
- Planters is looking to hire drivers to cruise in its Nutmobile: What to know about the job
- First Democrat enters race for open Wisconsin congressional seat in Republican district
- 24 more monkeys that escaped from a South Carolina lab are recovered unharmed
- Disney shareholders back CEO Iger, rebuff activist shareholders who wanted to shake up the company
- Wolf kills a calf in Colorado, the first confirmed kill after the predator’s reintroduction
- Cleanup begins at Los Angeles ‘trash house’ where entire property is filled with garbage and junk
- Voyager 2 is the only craft to visit Uranus. Its findings may have misled us for 40 years.
- Judge finds last 4 of 11 anti-abortion activists guilty in a 2021 Tennessee clinic blockade
Ranking
- Disney Store's Black Friday Sale Just Started: Save an Extra 20% When You Shop Early
- The Buffalo Bills agree to trade top receiver Stefon Diggs to the Houston Texans
- Ticket price for women's NCAA Final Four skyrockets to more than $2,000
- GOP suffers big setback in effort to make winning potentially critical Nebraska electoral vote more likely
- Michael Jordan and driver Tyler Reddick come up short in bid for NASCAR championship
- Here’s Everything You Need To Build Your Dream Spring Capsule Wardrobe, According to a Shopping Editor
- Mike Tyson says he's 'scared to death' ahead of fight vs. Jake Paul
- Caitlin Clark wins second straight national player of the year award
Recommendation
-
Elon Musk responds after Chloe Fineman alleges he made her 'burst into tears' on 'SNL'
-
Hannah Waddingham recalls being 'waterboarded' during 'Game of Thrones' stunt
-
'Nuclear bomb of privacy' or easy entry? MLB's face recognition gates delight and daunt
-
In swing-state Wisconsin, Democrat hustles to keep key Senate seat against Trump-backed millionaire
-
Amazon Best Books of 2024 revealed: Top 10 span genres but all 'make you feel deeply'
-
After voters reject tax measure, Chiefs and Royals look toward future, whether in KC or elsewhere
-
Lawsuit challenges $1 billion in federal funding to sustain California’s last nuclear power plant
-
Germany soccer team jerseys will be redesigned after Nazi logo similarities