Congress is poised to pass the most important climate bill in U.S. history, the first step in a yearslong effort to transform the measure into a massive, real-world expansion of clean energy, Ben and Andrew write. The big picture: If the House approves the Senate-passed bill unchanged, sending it to President Biden's desk, it has a plausible chance of slashing domestic emissions and resetting the dynamic in global climate talks. Catch up fast: The Senate yesterday approved Democrats' energy, tax and health care plan on a party-line vote. - That means the bill cleared its biggest hurdle — the same chamber where the last sweeping climate bill imploded in 2010.
- The measure is expected to pass the House and head to Biden's desk within days.
- It would invest roughly $370 billion in renewables, electric vehicles, hydrogen, clean energy equipment manufacturing, home efficiency, and other climate programs.
A few takeaways... U.S. emissions may fall a lot. Energy analysts who favor strong climate action say the plan should bring the U.S. within shouting distance of Biden's pledge under the Paris Agreement: cutting domestic greenhouse gas emissions in half compared to 2005 levels by 2030. It could change the tenor of global climate talks. The likely enactment of legislation to back up America's commitments would boost U.S. credibility to persuade other countries to take actions of their own. But it's not the be-all, end-all. The U.S. will still come up short of the 2030 Paris pledge without complementary executive, state and local policies, per multiple analyses. U.S. climate policy strongly favors carrots over sticks. The biggest climate provisions are major new or wider tax incentives rather than firm emissions targets with penalties. - The separate bipartisan infrastructure law is also a cash infusion for programs on EV charging, transmission, and demonstrating emerging technologies.
- Meanwhile, a clean power mandate for utilities couldn't get past Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), carbon pricing proposals have little traction, and a recent Supreme Court ruling will likely limit the breadth of executive regulations.
It's a complicated moment for activists. The bill mandates new oil-and-gas drilling auctions on federal lands and waters, despite Biden's campaign pledge to thwart new fossil fuel development in those areas. It's complicated for the oil industry, too. Giants BP and Shell support the bill. But industry lobbying groups — the American Petroleum Institute and the American Exploration & Production Council — have criticized the corporate tax policies as a brake on investment. Read the whole story. |
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