Bloomberg Green
- Jennifer A Dlouhy | Josh Wingrove
▸Introduces nominees for Energy, Interior, EPA at event
▸Promises to
rejoin Paris climate accord, restore EPA
|
President-elect Joe Biden.
Photographer: Drew Angerer/Getty Images
|
President-elect Joe Biden introduced on Saturday key members of the team he is
assembling to fulfill his pledge to combat climate change, calling them
brilliant and qualified.
Climate change is “the existential threat of our time,” Biden said, and the
people he was nominating to lead the
Environmental Protection Agency, the White House Council on Environmental Quality and the departments of
Energy, and Interior will be “ready on day one.”
“We need a
unified national response to climate change. We need to meet the moment with
the urgency it demands, as we would with any national emergency, ” Biden
said at an event in Wilmington, Delaware.
With Republicans set to hold at least 50 seats in the
Senate, likely dooming the chances for sweeping climate and environmental
legislation, Biden will be relying heavily on the officials to advance his
clean-energy agenda through federal regulation. He has proposed a sweeping
$2 trillion climate plan to promote clean energy, called for an
emissions-free electric grid in 15 years and and promised to pare oil
drilling on federal lands.
“We need to get to work and we’ve got
to get to work right away,” Biden said.
He vowed to promote the use of electric vehicles by having the federal
government purchase more of them, and to get 500,000 charging stations
installed. He also called for 1.5 million energy-efficient homes and public
housing units to be built, and 3.2 million abandoned oil and gas wells to be
plugged.
He said the U.S. would rejoin the Paris climate accord
and establish a climate-focused civilian conservation corps to put people to
work.
The nominees he presented represent veteran government
leaders and regulators as well as environmentalists that progressives had
demanded.
They include former Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm to lead
the Energy Department, North Carolina environmental regulator
Michael Regan
to be EPA administrator and Democratic Representative Deb Haaland to head
the Interior Department.
Biden has also tapped lawyer
Brenda Mallory
to be chair of the Council on Environmental Quality, Gina McCarthy as
national climate adviser and Ali Zaidi as her deputy.
If
confirmed, Haaland would be the first Native American in a U.S. cabinet
post, Mallory would be the first African American to lead the
White House
Council on Environmental Quality and Regan would be the first Black man to
serve as
Environmental Protection Agency
administrator. Lisa Jackson was the agency’s first African American
administrator, under former President Barack Obama.
Neither
McCarthy nor Zaidi will need Senate approval to become climate advisers, and
the others are widely expected to be confirmed.
However, Republicans have
already signaled they will sharply scrutinize the records of Haaland and
Regan, including their past opposition to fossil fuel projects. Haaland, for
instance, has supported a ban on the fracking process that has propelled
U.S. oil and gas production -- a stance that gives oil industry leaders
concern but has been heralded by environmentalists.
Senator Kevin
Cramer, a Republican from oil- and coal-rich North Dakota, warned the
candidates could see “a bit of a brawl,” during a Fox Business Network
interview Friday.
The Independent Petroleum Association of New
Mexico said Thursday it had “serious concerns” about Haaland’s nomination,
adding that she “has repeatedly demonstrated contempt toward our
industry.”
The Interior Department runs the national park system
and oversees grazing, recreation, energy development and other activities on
about a fifth of U.S. land. The department holds trust title to more than 56
million acres for tribal nations and its Bureau of Indian Affairs works
directly with 578 federally recognized Native American tribes.
Haaland,
60, and a citizen of the Laguna Pueblo, a 7,700-member tribe west of
Albuquerque, New Mexico, has drawn widespread praise from environmental
groups and tribal leaders. They say she would bring a deep commitment to
protect the land to an agency in charge of 500 million acres of it. She was
just elected to her second term in the House of Representatives.
Appearing
to fight back tears as she accepted Biden’s nomination, she
noted that one prior
Interior secretary had pledged to “to civilize or exterminate” American
Indians.
“We will ensure that the decisions at Interior will once again be driven by
science,” she said.
McCarthy, 66, who now leads the
Natural Resources Defense Council,
pioneered the first limits on greenhouse gas emissions from power plants
during her nearly four years leading the EPA during the Obama
administration.
“I’m here today because climate change is not
only a threat to the planet -- it is a threat to our health and our
well-being,” McCarthy said. “Defeating this threat is the fight of our
lifetimes and our success will require the engagement of every community,
every sector in our nation and every country in the world.”
Mallory,
63, previously served as the Council on Environmental Quality’s general
counsel under former President Barack Obama. Most recently, she has been the
director of regulatory policy for the
Southern Environmental Law Center, a group that uses litigation to promote clean air, safe water and
wildlife conservation.
“It is essential that we deploy smart and
humane policy to help communities pull themselves back from the edge and
improve the health, security and prosperity of all people,” Mallory said.
Regan,
44, already worked at the EPA for roughly a decade, though he’s currently
secretary of North Carolina’s Department of Environmental Quality. He has
guided initiatives to combat environmental inequities and climate change,
and he’s been at the center of disputes over new gas pipelines and pollution
cleanup that are playing out nationwide.
Invoking Biden’s
campaign motto to “build back better,” Regan said on Saturday that “we need
an all-hands-on-deck approach from industry and individuals, finding common
ground to build back better.”
Granholm, 61, served as energy
adviser to Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign and has been credited with
expanding Michigan’s clean energy industry during her two terms as governor.
She served as Michigan’s attorney general from 1999 to 2003, has been an
adviser to the Pew Charitable Trusts’ clean energy program and is a
professor at the
University of California, Berkeley.
Granholm said Saturday that the Energy Department
would take steps to assure that a transition to clean energy would result in
jobs for Americans.
“We can win those jobs for American workers
with the right policy,” she said.
Zaidi, New York Governor Andrew
Cuomo’s deputy secretary for energy and environment, is a longtime adviser
to Biden who helped negotiate the Paris Climate accord. He is a native of
Pakistan.
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