Joe Biden’s environmental challenge

Joe Biden’s victory in the US 2020 presidential race portends a full 180 degree turn in environmental policy.  The campaign has consistently called climate change the “number one issue facing humanity” and the Biden administration has  vowed a national transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy.

Among the environmental initiatives Biden promised in the campaign:

  • Put into place a $2 trillion plan for infrastructure towards a goal of zero carbon pollution from  electricity by 2035 and net-zero emissions by 2050, the campaign said.
  • Establish an Environmental and Climate Justice Division within the U.S. Department of Justice.
  • End fossil fuel subsidies
  • Rejoin the Paris Climate Accords
  • Reverse Trump climate and environment policy rollbacks in EPA, Dept. of Energy, Interior, Defense and other agencies.
  • Take a science-based approach to air, water, chemical and solid waste pollution through the Environmental Protection Agency
  • Return to fuel efficiency standards for new cars and light trucks
  • Establish an Office of Climate Change and Health Equity at HHS and Launch an Infectious Disease Defense Initiative.

“The first 100 days of the Biden administration are likely to see a flurry of executive actions addressing climate change, as well as a major push to insert clean energy provisions into legislation that could pass with a bipartisan coalition,” says Lisa Friedman of the New York Times.

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