Friday, February 17, 2023

Biden’s climate team faces its Ohio rail test

Presented by ConocoPhillips: Your guide to the political forces shaping the energy transformation
Feb 17, 2023 View in browser
 
Power Switch newsletter logo

By Arianna Skibell

Presented by

ConocoPhillips

Drone picture of train derailment.

A drone picture shows portions of the freight train that derailed in East Palestine, Ohio. | Gene J. Puskar/AP Photo

The toxic train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, is straining public trust in federal safety measures just as the Biden administration begins its high-stakes effort to reindustrialize the U.S. economy around green energy.

The Feb. 3 derailment of a 150-car Norfolk Southern train sent tankers carrying hazardous chemicals such as vinyl chloride tumbling off the tracks in the 4,700-person village, causing explosions and smoke plumes while forcing residents to evacuate.

Environmental Protection Agency chief Michael Regan was the first Cabinet-level Biden appointee to visit the site yesterday, nearly two weeks after the disaster poisoned the soil, air and water.

Regan assured residents it’s safe to return home and that the agency is conducting around-the-clock air monitoring. But many people, complaining of headaches and rashes, are wary. And lawmakers from both parties have said the White House should have acted more urgently in the disaster's wake.

The calamity, and the national media attention it’s drawing, represents a tough political test for Regan and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg — two officials who are also helping lead President Joe Biden’s clean energy overhaul.

To be clear, slashing planet-warming pollution is critical for curbing the climate crisis.

But the president’s climate strategy includes mining the minerals needed for electric vehicle batteries, building factories to process those minerals, and laying long-range transmission lines to carry wind and solar power to cities — all of it in someone’s backyard.

And the administration will need to assure Americans that these projects aren’t endangering people and wildlife.

Of course, fossil fuel infrastructure has its own damaging track record and arguably poses greater risks. Its history includes the Deepwater Horizon oil spill of 2010, Cancer Alley in Louisiana, ongoing black lung cases in West Virginia, numerous fatal pipeline explosions and pervasive environmental justice violations.

But building out the low-carbon economy is not without safety risks. The nation’s largest proposed lithium mine in Nevada is under scrutiny for its potential degradation of nearby aquifers, air quality, sage grouse habitat and Indigenous sacred sites. Solar arrays in the western United States are impeding wildlife corridors, and the sonic disruptions from building offshore wind farms can harm marine life, if only temporarily.

Regan vowed to use the government’s legal authority to hold rail carrier Norfolk Southern accountable for the public health crisis. How well the administration does that could bear on its ability to achieve its climate ambitions.

 

Thank goodness it's Friday — thank you for tuning in to POLITICO's Power Switch. I'm your host, Arianna Skibell. Power Switch is brought to you by the journalists behind E&E News and POLITICO Energy. Send your tips, comments, questions to askibell@eenews.net.

Programming note: We’ll be off this Monday for Presidents Day but will be back in your inboxes Tuesday!

 

A message from ConocoPhillips:

ConocoPhillips joined communities on the North Slope and across Alaska to ensure the development of the Willow project is environmentally and socially responsible. Willow will create opportunities for Alaska Native communities and employment for skilled union labor. Learn more about the multi-year public consultation process and read what Alaskans are saying about Willow here.

 
Play audio

Listen to today’s POLITICO Energy podcast

Today in POLITICO Energy’s podcast: Catherine Morehouse breaks down the options officials are considering for securing the nation’s power grid against physical attacks.

 

A message from ConocoPhillips:

ConocoPhillips

 
Power Centers

Elon Musk and President Joe Biden.

Elon Musk and President Joe Biden. | Win McNamee/Getty Images (Musk); Alex Wong/Getty Images (Biden)

Turmoil in Biden-Musk land
One day after President Joe Biden announced that Tesla Inc. would make its massive electric vehicle charging network public, the company fired dozens of workers at the factory that makes components for those chargers, writes Scott Waldman.

The firings also came a day after Tesla workers in Buffalo, N.Y., announced they were unionizing. Tesla honcho Elon Musk is famously anti-union, and the employees' dismissal may fly in the face of Biden's efforts to elevate union workers as a pillar of the nation's wide-ranging transition to clean energy.

Having it both ways
As lawmakers restart negotiations to speed up the permitting process for energy projects, Democratic Rep. Scott Peters of California wants to be a bipartisan dealmaker, write Emma Dumain and Kelsey Brugger.

But Peters’ steadfast belief that solving the climate crisis will require a reexamination of long-standing environmental regulations puts him at odds with his colleagues who consider those laws sacrosanct.

Twist!
Biden's America-first, subsidy-heavy climate law has gained some grudging and, for a Democrat, unlikely admirers in Europe: conservatives, writes Karl Mathiesen.

Within the center-right European People's Party, the largest alliance of parties in the European Parliament, officials are smarting over why their own politicians aren't taking a page from the Biden playbook.

In Other News

President Franklin Roosevelt at the new 21-story medical unit which he dedicated in Jersey City, N.J. on Oct. 2, 1936 assuring the medical profession that the New Deal contemplated no action detrimental to it in carrying out the Social Security Act. At left is Mayor Frank Hague of Jersey City and at right is Lieut. Col. E.M. Watson, Military aide. (AP Photo)

President Franklin Roosevelt promotes the New Deal in 1936. | AP Photo

History lesson: What the New Deal can teach us about how to electrify everything.

Costs: Soaring energy prices triggered by the Russia-Ukraine conflict could push up to 141 million more people around the globe into extreme poverty.

 

DOWNLOAD THE POLITICO MOBILE APP: Stay up to speed with the newly updated POLITICO mobile app, featuring timely political news, insights and analysis from the best journalists in the business. The sleek and navigable design offers a convenient way to access POLITICO's scoops and groundbreaking reporting. Don’t miss out on the app you can rely on for the news you need, reimagined. DOWNLOAD FOR iOSDOWNLOAD FOR ANDROID.

 
 
Subscriber Zone

A showcase of some of our best subscriber content.

Flooded home homes and buildings are shown in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian, Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022, near Naples, Fla.

Flooded homes in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian near Naples, Fla., in September. | Wilfredo Lee/AP

Homebuyers nationwide are ignoring flood risk and paying inflated prices to create a housing bubble that could crash as climate change intensifies flood damage.

Two battery storage projects in Texas are the first to tap financing from an expanded tax credit under the Inflation Reduction Act.

The Energy Department is exploring ways to speed up permitting for proposed liquefied natural gas export projects.

That's it for today, folks. Thanks for reading, and have a great weekend!

 

A message from ConocoPhillips:

The Willow project combines state-of-the-art technology with a strong commitment to environmental stewardship. The benefits: Willow will produce much needed domestic energy and provide billions in revenue to local, state and federal governments. We are proud to produce the energy America needs. Learn more about the Willow project and the benefits it offers.

 
 

LISTEN TO POLITICO'S ENERGY PODCAST: Check out our daily five-minute brief on the latest energy and environmental politics and policy news. Don't miss out on the must-know stories, candid insights, and analysis from POLITICO's energy team. Listen today.

 
 
 

Follow us on Twitter

Arianna Skibell @ariannaskibell

 

Follow us

Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Instagram Listen on Apple Podcast
 

To change your alert settings, please log in at https://www.politico.com/_login?base=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.politico.com/settings

This email was sent to edwardlorilla1986.paxforex@blogger.com by: POLITICO, LLC 1000 Wilson Blvd. Arlington, VA, 22209, USA

Please click here and follow the steps to unsubscribe.

No comments:

Post a Comment

22 spring outfit ideas to fight fashion-decision fatigue

Your Horoscope For The Week Of May 13 VIEW IN BROWSER ...