Joe Biden

Weekly Climate News

April 22, 2021 

  • Alaska’s boreal forests have experienced extreme damage from wildfires, but the regrowth of deciduous trees is helping to sequester more carbon than before. 

  • Climate change has been altering the monsoon season in India, which poses threatening concerns for both Asian countries and the world. 

  • Dust plumes from Africa, like the recent “Godzilla” pushed by winds in June 2020 from the Sahara across the Atlantic to North America, will shrink significantly due to climate change. 

  • U.S. President Joe Biden will announce on Earth Day that the United States will cut carbon emissions in half by the end of the decade. 

  • The “Climate Clock” in New York City’s Union Square now shows an estimate of how much of the world’s energy comes from renewable resources. 

  • A recent study found that air pollution in India is costing Indian businesses $95 billion every year. 

  • Russian President Vladimir Putin accepted an invitation from Biden for a virtual climate summit. 

  • Springtime snow and unseasonably harsh frosts in Western Europe are connected to losses of Arctic sea ice.

  • U.S. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haalandrevoked a slew of orders issued under the Trump administration, shifting away from policies in favor of the oil and gas industries.

Deb Haaland Makes History as Newly Appointed Head of the Department of the Interior

Pictured above: Democratic Rep. Deb Haaland of New Mexico. Photo courtesy of WikiMedia Commons.

Pictured above: Democratic Rep. Deb Haaland of New Mexico. Photo courtesy of WikiMedia Commons.

By Catelyn Fitzgerald ‘23

Staff Writer

In his first weeks in office, President Joe Biden announced his nominations for what will likely be one of the most diverse presidential Cabinets in American history. One unprecedented nominee was Democratic Rep. Deb Haaland of New Mexico to head the Department of the Interior. Haaland, a member of the Laguna Pueblo tribe, would make history as the first Indigenous person to be seated in the Cabinet. Her ancestry is particularly significant due to the responsibilities of the DOI, which manages the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Bureau of Indian Education. According to the Interior Inspector General Mark Lee Greenblatt, these bureaus have previously seen poor leadership from the DOI, and the BIE in particular struggles with “fraud, waste, and mismanagement.” Haaland’s leadership in the department could elevate Indigenous people’s affairs and bring attention to the years of neglect faced by their communities. 

The DOI is also responsible for the care of America’s public and protected lands, including the National Park Service, wildlife conservation initiatives and natural resource management. “I’ll be fierce for all of us, for our planet and all of our protected land, and I’m honored and ready to serve,” Haaland said in her nomination acceptance speech. 

Haaland spent her childhood moving from one state to another as part of a military family before returning to New Mexico, where she raised her daughter and worked to put herself through law school. 

“I know what it’s like to be on food stamps. I know what it’s like to piece together health care for me and my child. And so I feel like, in this day and time, in the middle of a pandemic, with economic struggles and environmental injustice, we need folks who are ‘close to the pain,’” Haaland said in a recent interview for the podcast “Living on Earth” from media company PRX. After working a variety of jobs, from starting her own salsa company to working as a tribal administrator, she became one of the first Indigenous women seated in Congress after being elected in 2018.

If confirmed as the secretary of the interior, Haaland would be removed from her seat in Congress, along with Democratic Rep. Marcia Fudge of Ohio and Democratic Rep. Cedric Richmond of Louisiana, to work for the Biden administration. Democratic leaders have expressed their concern about the possibility of losing their already slim majority in the House. While no official strategy has been announced, leaders such as House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn of South Carolina have recommended that Haaland’s confirmation hearing be delayed until special elections for the vacant House seats occur.

Haaland is currently facing resistance to her nomination from House Republicans, who are concerned about her stances on environmental issues. In contrast to former President Donald Trump’s efforts to open up as much public land to natural resource extraction as possible, Biden has made his refusal to issue any new oil and gas drilling permits clear. Instead, Biden is looking to expand the development of renewable energy sources. Haaland would oversee this moratorium on gas and oil leasing and has additionally shown support for the Green New Deal, which she co-sponsored during her first term in Congress. Many Congressional Republicans have also expressed their fears about what this might do to the economies of their states and their constituents’ job security. States like New Mexico, which Haaland represents, rely heavily on the fossil fuel industry. 

“It will hurt a family who was able to send their children to a better school, take a nice vacation in the summertime. … It will destroy their livelihoods,” Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana commented in a recent interview.

Weekly Climate News

Feb. 4, 2021

  • New Zealand climate advisers are encouraging steep cuts in carbon emissions to align with the 1.5 C global warming limit. 

  • Exxon Mobil, one of the world's largest international oil and gas companies, invested $3 billion in carbon capture.  

  • General Motors announced a phase-out of petroleum-powered cars and trucks, promising to sell only zero-emission vehicles by 2035. The company has also set goals for carbon neutrality by 2040.

  • Due to long-standing environmental injustices, Chicago’s COVID-19 vaccine rollout plan put polluted communities last, which left poorer communities of color among the last to receive the vaccine. 

  • U.S. President Joe Biden signed an executive order that strongly encourages the federal government to exclusively purchase zero-emission vehicles. 

  • A U.S. research institution that studies the impact of climate change in the Arctic has announced that it will be significantly enhancing efforts to connect the science it funds with the communities that live in the region.

  • Greenland’s glacier retreat is accelerating as a result of warming seas in response to climate change. 

  • Human pollution has been found deep in the world’s oceans. Read about it here.

Environmental Protections Restored in the Bering Sea

Environmental Protections Restored in the Bering Sea

The Biden administration recently delivered a major victory for environmental protection by reinstating the Northern Bering Sea Climate Resilience Area. The protected area off the coast of Alaska was originally designated in a 2016 executive order issued by the Obama administration. The designation was then revoked in the early weeks of Trump’s presidency. The NBSCRA was restored as part of Biden’s first executive order, the Executive Order on Protecting Public Health and the Environment and Restoring Science to Tackle the Climate Crisis.

Biden Administration Acknowledges Climate Crisis in New Executive Orders

Biden Administration Acknowledges Climate Crisis in New Executive Orders

President Joe Biden took action this week to fulfill one of his campaign promises when he signed multiple executive orders on Jan. 27. His executive orders focused on three main themes: job creation, environmental justice, and taking a whole-of-government approach to the climate crisis. In his remarks prior to the signing, Biden stated that climate change should be seen as “an essential element of U.S. foreign policy and national security.”

Weekly Climate News

Jan. 28, 2021

  • An earthquake hit Indonesia’s Sulawesi island, causing buildings to collapse and leaving 42 people dead.

  • One-third of American rivers have turned green as a result of human activity since 1984. Only 5 percent are now considered blue.  

  • Newly inaugurated U.S. President Joe Biden rolled out a slew of environmental policies and climate change goals, including canceling the Keystone Pipeline and rejoining the Paris Agreement. 

  • America’s greenhouse gas emissions plummeted more than 10 percent in 2020.  

  • Earth is reaching serious climate tipping points.

  • European Union foreign ministers called for an end to financing fossil fuels. 

  • 2020 is tied with 2016 for the hottest year on record, and Earth is now committed to a 2-degree hotter future. 

  • As a result of our changing climate, land ecosystems have been found to become less absorbent of carbon dioxide. Furthermore, recent research suggests that trees may become carbon sources rather than carbon sinks.

  • Women in Kenya are claiming more land rights, a significant step forward, as women’s involvement in decisions about land use and resource allocation is essential to slow down climate change.  

The Lasting Impact of the Trump Administration on the Environment

Caption. One of Trump’s last policies to enact in office reduced over 3 million acres of critical habitat for the northern spotted owl. Image courtesy of WikiMedia Commons.

Caption. One of Trump’s last policies to enact in office reduced over 3 million acres of critical habitat for the northern spotted owl. Image courtesy of WikiMedia Commons.

By Helen Gloege ’23 

Staff Writer

On day one, newly inaugurated President Joe Biden and his climate team got to work: They rejoined the Paris Agreement, rescinded the federal permit for the Keystone XL Pipeline, reestablished the Interagency Working Group on the Social Cost of Greenhouse Gases and placed a moratorium on all oil and natural gas leasing activities in the Arctic Wildlife Refuge. Biden has promised a presidency that centers on climate change. Despite his goals, the administration will be working with deep budget cuts, staff losses and the elimination of climate programs and research from the former administration. Drastic climate action will not occur until Biden officials remedy the deficiencies left behind. Gina McCarthy, the administration’s national climate advisor, said, “There is hard work ahead to rebuild agencies and our capacities from the ground up.”

Trump’s actions over his final two months in office weakened many existing environmental regulations. For example, on Jan. 13, with most attention focused on former President Donald Trump’s second impeachment vote, the Environmental Protection Agency issued a new rule limiting its ability to regulate heat-trapping gases. That same day, the Fish and Wildlife Service announced that it had slashed over 3 million acres of critical habitat for the northern spotted owl, possibly leading to logging in those areas. 

Throughout his presidency, Trump made significant changes to the U.S. Endangered Species Act. Within the past month, additional changes took place, making it more difficult to define “critical habitats,” specific geographic areas set aside for a species’ survival. One of the changes he made reduces the amount of land considered “critical habitats,” while another makes it easier to avoid establishing a habitat. 

Along with more recent changes, the Trump administration has led to lost years of progress on emission reduction and developing public trust in scientific integrity. The administration also demonstrated pullbacks on climate regulations despite scientific authorities clearly communicating the urgent need to act. In 2017, Trump told the EPA to dismantle the Obama-era Clean Power Plan. The plan aimed to reduce carbon emissions from the power sector to 32 percent below 2005 levels by 2030. This reduction would have avoided 70 million tons of emissions by the end of this year and over 400 million tons by 2030. The Clean Power Plan was replaced with the Affordable Clean Energy rule that the EPA said would result in only 11 million tons less carbon dioxide in the atmosphere by 2030. This rule was then unanimously struck down in federal court on Jan. 19, 2021. 

Due to how long greenhouse gases stay in the atmosphere, the Trump administration could influence climate change for years to come. A 2020 estimate from the Rhodium Group, a research institute aiming to provide independent and original research, data and analytics on a range of global subjects, found that the Trump administration’s actions, which weakened greenhouse gas regulations, could add 1.8 gigatons of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere by 2035. Additionally, various climate-related organizations have been adversely affected. EPA research labs and science advisory boards are currently smaller, as their workforce has lost over 600 people. The Department of Energy’s Quadrennial Energy Review, a four-part roadmap for U.S. energy policy up to 2040, has been curtailed, along with other research. The Department of the Treasury’s Office of Environment and Energy has also been cut. Additionally, the Trump administration disengaged from the international Arctic Council and blocked climate work at the U.S. Arctic Research Commission.

Among the slew of decreasing regulations, the oil and gas lease spree has peaked during the last few months of the Trump administration, with the Bureau of Land Management approving the sale of 1,400 leases out of 3,000 applications. Oil and gas leases are difficult to undo because they often involve property rights laws. Furthermore, many of the oil and gas leases target sensitive habitats. The Bureau of Land Management headquarters recently relocated to Grand Junction, Colorado, from Washington, D.C., causing many leading officials to leave the agency and decrease its effectiveness. 

In early January, the Trump administration announced it had issued drilling leases on over 400,000 acres of Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The formal issue of the leases by the Bureau of Land Management came a day before the inauguration of Biden, who had pledged to protect the 19.6 million-acre land. Before leaseholders can begin drilling wells, they need to seek permits from the new administration. The Bureau of Land Management’s Alaska office said it had issued nine of the 11 leases that received bids at auction on Jan. 6 and were working on issuing the remaining two. The Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority was given seven leases. The other two were issued to Alaska real estate company Knik Arm Services LLC and Regenerate Alaska Inc., a unit of Australia’s 88 Energy Ltd. The Gwich’in Steering Committee that represents tribes reliant on the region’s Porcupine caribou denounced the move. 

On day one of his presidency, Biden put a temporary moratorium on the gas and oil leasing activities in the refuge. This ban cited alleged legal deficiencies underlying the program and the inadequacy of required environmental review. Biden’s executive order will be directed to the Department of the Interior to review the program and the law surrounding the situation. It could be difficult for the Biden administration and environmental groups to challenge these leases. Once the lease is sold, its buyer has property rights over it, so there will likely be litigation if the leases themselves were validly issued. If any one of the leases are upheld in court, it will become much more difficult to revoke any of them.

Nevertheless, buried in the $900 billion stimulus package passed last December was some climate legislation. The package included the phasing out of hydrofluorocarbons, a class of super heat-trapping gases, and the extension of carbon capture tech tax credit for the industry. The United States will also officially rejoin the Paris Agreement on Feb. 19. The Biden team is likely to rely on state and local partners to help demonstrate emission cuts. The administration has removed the Keystone XL Pipeline’s permit, meaning the chances of it being built have significantly diminished. The pipeline would have supported new production beyond 2050. The administration is also reestablishing the Obama-era process that developed and maintained the social cost of carbon and methane. The metrics will assign a monetized value to each ton of carbon dioxide emitted into the atmosphere and will be used in cost-benefit analyses for regulation and other actions.

The Biden administration can replace many of the environmental protections Trump dismantled. Policies such as reinstating or tightening Obama-era standards on issues like car and truck emissions can take anywhere from a few months to a year. There are several pathways that the Biden administration may use to undo the regulatory accomplishments of the Trump administration. The fastest route is the Congressional Review Act that allows Congress to nullify a rule within 60 legislative working days of its passage. However, when a law is nullified, it prohibits future regulation that is considered “substantially the same.” This part of the act hasn’t been tested in courts, and it could backfire when developing similar legislation. Another pathway is through the use of courts to block regulations on various grounds. The rule-making process itself is another tool where it could be possible to simultaneously repeal and replace rules. Many of these processes can be full of delays and take years to go fully into effect.

Biden Announces John Kerry as Special Presidential Envoy for Climate

Pictured above: former Secretary of State John Kerry. Photo courtesy of Flickr.

Pictured above: former Secretary of State John Kerry. Photo courtesy of Flickr.

By Helen Gloege ’23

Staff Writer 

President-elect Joe Biden announced on Nov. 23 that former Secretary of State John Kerry will serve as the special presidential envoy for climate, a new position created by Biden’s team. Kerry will serve as a cabinet-level appointee in the administration and will sit on the National Security Council as its first-ever official dedicated to climate change. 

The term “presidential” in his title means that Kerry is likely to report directly to Biden. The term “envoy” means that Kerry is a senior diplomat and is thus responsible for representing the U.S. climate agenda in diplomatic circles, including in meetings with foreign leaders. Biden’s team has also promised to instate a domestic equivalent to Kerry, an appointment that has yet to be announced.

The appointment of Kerry to this office indicates a shift in policy and approach to climate from the last four years under the Trump administration. The position shows that Biden’s approach to climate change is a foreign policy issue because Kerry will sit on the NSC and work with international officials. Kerry will also be sent as a representative of the U.S. on climate-related issues — an unusual feature of this appointment in that most envoys normally require confirmation by the U.S. Senate.

During the Obama administration, Carol Browner, an Environmental Protection Agency administrator, served as a domestic climate policy coordinator. Browner was known for having a vast wealth of knowledge on climate change, but her pushes for action were frequently countered by Larry Summers, Obama’s chief economic advisor. 

Kerry succeeded Hillary Clinton as secretary of state in 2013 and played a significant role in the development of the Paris climate accord. In 2019, Kerry co-founded a bipartisan initiative of world leaders and celebrities to combat the climate crisis dubbed World War Zero. During this past Democratic primary, he was the co-chair of the Biden-Sanders unity task force that was focused on producing recommendations on climate.

After its announcement, Kerry’s appointment received much praise. Michael Mann, the director of the Earth Science Center at Penn State, said he “cannot think of one person better qualified” for the job than Kerry. The Sierra Club’s acting Deputy Director for Policy and Advocacy Dalal Aboulhosn pointed to Kerry’s longtime advocacy on climate and decades of political experience as key positive aspects of the nomination. Former Senator Tim Wirth of Colorado, who was a climate negotiator under secretary of state for global affairs in President Bill Clinton’s administration, noted that Kerry “understands the depth of the climate issue and the need for a huge global economic transition.” Co-founder and Executive Director of the Sunrise Movement Varshini Prakash, who co-chaired Biden’s climate task force, also praised Kerry’s appointment, saying he is “committed to engaging and listening to young voices — even when we might not always agree — ensuring we have a seat at the table.” Sunrise also responded to the position, calling for a domestic counterpart to Kerry, which the Biden team responded to by saying there would be a domestic counterpart announced in the near future.

Despite many encouraging responses, not all reactions have been positive. Wenonah Hauter, the executive director of Food & Water Action, said that “Kerry has been a long-time apologist for fossil fuel fracking, and a reliable promoter of false climate solutions.” The environmental group Food & Water Action has doubted whether Biden’s vision will be fast or effective enough. Arkansas Republican Senator Tom Cotton is also critical of the appointment, saying, “John Kerry [is] thrilled at [the] prospect of returning to his dream job of living in Central European luxury hotels while negotiating deals that are bad for America.”

The position of special presidential envoy for climate could be the beginning of many climate-related positions in the Cabinet and government. For now, the creation of this post shows that tackling the climate crisis is a priority for the new executive branch. Within the upcoming weeks, it is likely we will know Kerry’s promised domestic counterpart and more details about the Biden administration’s plans to confront the climate crisis.