Biden Administration Offers Climate Grants as New Report Makes Drastic Prediction

November 9, 2022 by Tom Ramstack
Biden Administration Offers Climate Grants as New Report Makes Drastic Prediction
(Photo by Li-An Lim via UnSplash)

WASHINGTON — Climate change is creating harm to the United States that is 68% worse than most of the rest of the world, according to a federal report announced this week.

“The things Americans value most are at risk,” a draft copy of the National Climate Assessment says.

At the same time, the options offered by the U.S. government to combat global warming have never been greater.

The latest example comes from the Environmental Protection Agency, which announced Friday that $13 billion is available from the Inflation Reduction Act to advance “environmental justice.” 

The EPA is seeking public input through a web page on the kinds of projects that should get the money.

One grant under the Inflation Reduction Act that President Joe Biden signed into law in August allocates $1 billion for electric school buses.

The act’s other grant programs authorize the EPA to distribute $5 billion to help state and local governments develop “strong climate pollution reduction strategies” and another $4 billion to reduce transportation emissions.

The alarms raised in the preliminary National Climate Assessment underpin a Biden administration policy that seeks to turn environmentalism into a profitable enterprise.

Last week, Biden announced a plan to phase out coal-fired generating plants whose emissions contribute to global warming. He has set a goal for the United States to cut its greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030 and eliminate them by 2050.

Biden said during a speech in California on promoting the American semiconductor industry that coal-fired plants are too expensive. He added that his administration would “be shutting these plants down all across America and having wind and solar.”

Some Republicans criticized his pledge of more renewable energy as unrealistic.

On Tuesday, the U.S. Energy Information Administration predicted the nation’s energy consumption would increase to a record high in 2022 because of increasing economic activity and hotter summer weather.

The draft National Climate Assessment gave a dire prediction of worsening calamities from climate change without a switch to renewable energy.

“There is no known precedent for a species changing its own climate as quickly as we are changing ours, and there are many uncertainties associated with a rapidly warming world,” the report says.

Congress passed a law in 1990 requiring the federal government to produce a National Climate Assessment every four years. The draft report is undergoing public comment now before a scheduled official public release next year.

Some of the worst effects are on large expanses of land, which warm faster than the oceans, and in higher latitudes, according to the report. The result is likely to be faster spread of disease, decreases in farm yields, higher food prices and compromised ecosystems.

Average temperatures in the United States have risen 2.5 degrees Fahrenheit from global warming, compared with about 2 degrees worldwide.

Increasingly, the effects are touching Americans in their everyday lives, the draft report says. It includes more flooding in Miami, Florida, damage to Alaskan fisheries and declines in snowfall that disrupt the business of Colorado ski resorts.

The Biden administration released the draft of the National Climate Assessment while the United Nations’ COP27 climate change conference continued this week in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt. COP27 stands for the Conference of the Parties of 27 participating nations.

As the environmental crisis worsens, several of the world’s wealthiest nations showed greater willingness during the conference to contribute to pollution-control measures of underdeveloped countries.

The United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change says global coal use for electricity generation must fall by 80% below 2010 levels by 2030 to attain the Paris Agreement’s goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Centigrade. Coal needs to be phased out completely by 2040 to meet the commitment. 

The poorest nations said at COP27 they don’t have the money to replace coal-fired plants with renewable energy.

Tom can be reached at [email protected] and @TomRamstack

A+
a-
  • Biden administration
  • climate grants
  • National Climate Assessment
  • In The News

    Health

    Voting

    Climate

    Climate Change Concerns Grow, but Few Think Biden's Climate Law Will Help, an AP-NORC Poll Finds

    Like many Americans, Ron Theusch is getting more worried about climate change. A resident of Alden, Minnesota, Theusch has noticed increasingly... Read More

    Like many Americans, Ron Theusch is getting more worried about climate change. A resident of Alden, Minnesota, Theusch has noticed increasingly dry and mild winters punctuated by short periods of severe cold — symptoms of a warming planet. As he thinks about that, future generations are on his... Read More

    Maui Fire Department Report on Deadly Wildfire Details It Was No Match for Unprecedented Blazes

    HONOLULU (AP) — When wildfires broke out across Maui last August, some firefighters carried victims piggyback over downed power lines to safety... Read More

    HONOLULU (AP) — When wildfires broke out across Maui last August, some firefighters carried victims piggyback over downed power lines to safety and sheltered survivors inside their engines. Another drove a moped into a burning neighborhood again and again, whisking people away from danger one at a time. But despite... Read More

    Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in US More Likely to Believe in Climate Change: AP-NORC Poll

    Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders in the United States are more likely than the overall adult population to... Read More

    Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders in the United States are more likely than the overall adult population to believe in human-caused climate change, according to a new poll. It also suggests that partisanship may not have as much of an impact on this group's environmental... Read More

    2023 Was a Record Year for Wind Installations as World Ramps Up Clean Energy, Report Says

    The world installed 117 gigawatts of new wind power capacity in 2023, a 50% increase from the year before, making... Read More

    The world installed 117 gigawatts of new wind power capacity in 2023, a 50% increase from the year before, making it the best year for new wind projects on record, according to a new report by the industry's trade association. The latest Global Wind Report, published Tuesday... Read More

    April 15, 2024
    by Dan McCue
    EPA Finalizes Permit for Largest Offshore Wind Farm in US

    WASHINGTON — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency last week issued a key air quality permit to Dominion Energy’s planned offshore... Read More

    WASHINGTON — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency last week issued a key air quality permit to Dominion Energy’s planned offshore wind project off the coast of Virginia Beach, Virginia. The agency issued the project’s final Clean Air Act Outer Continental Shelf air quality permit on April... Read More

    April 12, 2024
    by Dan McCue
    Shopping Mall Finds It’s Not Always Easy to Go Green

    NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. — With a nod toward Kermit the Frog, it’s not always easy going green, no matter how... Read More

    NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. — With a nod toward Kermit the Frog, it’s not always easy going green, no matter how good one's intentions. At least that appears to be the experience of shopping center giant Tanger, which wants to install solar panels on six of the... Read More

    News From The Well
    scroll top