Current:Home > InvestNine Ways Biden’s $2 Trillion Plan Will Tackle Climate Change-VaTradeCoin
Nine Ways Biden’s $2 Trillion Plan Will Tackle Climate Change
View Date:2025-01-07 14:09:39
In his “American Jobs Plan,” President Joe Biden aims to achieve unprecedented investment in action to address climate change by wrapping it in the kind of federal spending package that has allure for members of Congress of both parties.
The $2 trillion proposal holds out the promise of federal dollars for every Congressional district that has roads, bridges, water pipes, housing, transit systems, leaking oil wells or other infrastructure in need of upgrade and repair—in other words, most of the country. The only catch is that the money is meant for transformation, not restoration.
“This is no time to build back to the way things were,” said the preamble to the White House summary of the plan. “This is the moment to reimagine and rebuild a new economy.”
It remains to be seen whether in the current political climate, Biden will find any Republicans willing to sign on to an historic project to put the nation on track to a carbon-neutral economy, even if it means bringing money and jobs home to constituents. But it is well understood in Washington that Biden has a fallback option of passing much of the plan through a budget reconciliation measure, for which he wouldn’t need any GOP votes.
Biden’s proposal includes at least $650 billion in spending over 10 years on a U.S. clean energy transition; that would be about seven times the largest previous injection of federal money into clean energy, the $90 billion included in the economic stimulus package approved in the first year of President Barack Obama’s administration.
The final shape of the package will depend in large part on to what extent the Biden administration perceives it can negotiate to win bipartisan support, or to what extent it decides to move forward as aggressively and quickly as Democratic control of Congress will allow. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said she wants to see a vote on legislation by July 4.
Here are nine key climate elements of Biden’s jobs and infrastructure plan:
- The largest single climate-related provision in the plan is $213 billion to build, modernize and weatherize affordable housing, an idea that melds Biden’s climate and economic justice goals. The plan would tackle homes and buildings, the source of 40 percent of all U.S. carbon emissions, while addressing the shortage of quality housing for low-income communities of color. Biden is calling on Congress to develop a new competitive grant program that would give state and local governments incentive to eliminate exclusionary zoning policies that have made it difficult for so many families to find affordable housing.
- Biden proposes spending $174 billion to accelerate a transition to electric vehicles in the United States through consumer incentives like tax credits to purchasers of EVs, the building of a network of 500,000 EV charging stations, and direct federal spending. For example, there would be federal funding for converting school buses to electric vehicles. And Biden proposes to use the federal procurement process to electrify the entire federal fleet of vehicles, including those of the U.S. Postal Service
- The proposal also includes $100 billion for power grid modernization and resilience, both intended to stave off catastrophic outages like the one that was blamed for 70 deaths in Texas in February, and to upgrade the system to better handle and transport wind and solar energy. The Biden plan would establish a new Grid Deployment Authority, with an aim of making better use of existing rights-of-ways along roads and railways to site new high-voltage transmission lines.
- Biden would make an historic $85 billion investment in modernizing public transit, support that mass transit systems would welcome after a year in which 65 percent had to cut service because of the drop in ridership and revenue resulting from the Covid-19 pandemic. That investment would come on top of the $30.5 billion that was in Biden’s Covid-19 relief bill to help mass transit systems, which typically get only $10 billion annually in federal funding. A key aim of the program is to bring bus, rapid transit and rail service to underserved communities and neighborhoods across the country.
- The plan calls for a $35 billion investment in clean technology research and development, including the launching of a new incubator for cutting edge research. Biden proposes spending $15 billion in demonstration projects that will be key for tackling climate, like utility-scale energy storage, carbon capture and storage, hydrogen, advanced nuclear, rare earth element separations and floating offshore wind. Many of these areas of research already have bipartisan support.
- Biden would spend $16 billion employing union oil and gas workers to cap abandoned oil and gas wells and clean up mines, not only helping address unemployment in fossil fuel communities, but addressing emissions of the climate super-pollutant methane from the orphaned facilities.
- Biden’s package includes broad increases in corporate taxes, but he steered clear of including a carbon tax; though the idea has recently won support in the oil industry, neither Republicans nor Democrats on Capitol Hill have expressed enthusiasm for the idea. But Biden would fulfill his campaign pledge of eliminating fossil fuel industry subsidies, which are estimated to add up to at least $20 billion annually, including favored tax treatment for capital investments.
- Biden’s plan for the first time would establish a federal Energy Efficiency and Clean Electricity Standard requiring utilities to deliver a certain percentage of electricity from renewable or other clean energy sources. Although his plan did not spell out initial goals, Biden’s aim is to put the nation on track to a 100 percent carbon-pollution-free electricity sector by 2035.
- In the most direct nod to Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal, Biden would invest $10 billion in a new “Civilian Climate Corps.” In addition to conservation of public lands and waters projects, which was the focus of Roosevelt’s CCC, Biden’s Climate Corps would be deployed on projects to bolster community resilience and advance environmental justice.
Judy Fahys contributed reporting.
veryGood! (133)
Related
- Judge sets April trial date for Sarah Palin’s libel claim against The New York Times
- Gwyneth Paltrow Reflects on Magical Summer Romance With Matthew Perry in Moving Tribute
- Spooky savings: 23 businesses offering Halloween discounts from DoorDash, Red Lobster, Chipotle, more
- In Mississippi, most voters will have no choice about who represents them in the Legislature
- Colts' Kenny Moore II ridicules team's effort in loss to Bills
- Anchorage’s oldest building, a Russian Orthodox church, gets new life in restoration project
- Russians commemorate victims of Soviet repression as a present-day crackdown on dissent intensifies
- 'Friends' star Matthew Perry, sitcom great who battled addiction, dead at 54
- Up to 20 human skulls found in man's discarded bags, home in New Mexico
- Former Rangers owner George W. Bush throws first pitch before World Series Game 1 in Texas
Ranking
- Are Dancing with the Stars’ Jenn Tran and Sasha Farber Living Together? She Says…
- Here's what Speaker Mike Johnson says he will and won't bring to the House floor
- Maine mass shootings updates: Note from suspected gunman; Biden posts condolences
- Mass graves, unclaimed bodies and overcrowded cemeteries. The war robs Gaza of funeral rites
- Full House's John Stamos Shares Message to Costar Dave Coulier Amid Cancer Battle
- 12 people die in a plane crash in the Brazilian Amazon
- How many muscles are in the human body? The answer may surprise you.
- Magnitude 3.7 earthquake shakes San Francisco region, causes no damage
Recommendation
-
Jack Del Rio leaving Wisconsin’s staff after arrest on charge of operating vehicle while intoxicated
-
Talks on Ukraine’s peace plan open in Malta with officials from 65 countries — but not Russia
-
Matthew Perry Reflected on Ups and Downs in His Life One Year Before His Death
-
Indianapolis police say 1 dead, 9 others injured in overnight shooting at Halloween party
-
How Ben Affleck Really Feels About His and Jennifer Lopez’s Movie Gigli Today
-
Kelly dominates on mound as Diamondbacks bounce back to rout Rangers 9-1 and tie World Series 1-all
-
Watch as a curious bear rings a doorbell at a California home late at night
-
Uvalde breaks ground on new elementary school