Current:Home > StocksJoe Biden on Climate Change: Where the Candidate Stands -Clarity Finance Guides
Joe Biden on Climate Change: Where the Candidate Stands
View
Date:2025-04-14 18:08:13
“It’s almost like denying gravity now. … The willing suspension of disbelief can only be sustained for so long.”
—Joe Biden on climate denial, March 2015
Been There
Among the current candidates, only former Vice President Joseph Biden has debated a Republican opponent during a past contest for the White House—when he was Barack Obama’s running mate and took on Sarah Palin in 2008. It’s a moment that might come back to haunt him, because in a brief discussion of climate change—a chance to trounce her on the question of science denial or fossil fuel favoritism—he instead slipped into a discussion of what he called “clean coal,” which he said he had favored for 25 years. He explained it away as a reference to exporting American energy technology. But his loose language, taken in today’s context, sounds archaic.
Done That
Biden likes to say he was among the first to introduce a climate change bill in the Senate, and fact checkers generally agree. It was the Global Climate Protection Act of 1986 that was largely put into a spending bill in 1987. The Reagan administration pretty much ignored it, but the bill did call for an EPA national policy on climate change, and annual reports to Congress.
Biden was in the Senate 36 years, and he had a lifetime environmental voting score of 83 percent from the League of Conservation Voters. In 2007, he supported higher fuel efficiency standards for motor vehicles, which passed, and in 2003, modest caps on greenhouse gas emissions, which didn’t.
But his longevity is a liability, because the longer the voting record, the more contradictions. He missed a key vote in 2008 on the Lieberman-Warner Climate Security Act, which was said to be the strongest global warming bill to ever make it to the Senate floor. Biden also opposed tightening fuel efficiency standards earlier in his career.
The Biden-Obama administration was strong on climate change, especially in its second term, notably achieving the landmark Paris climate agreement, asserting climate action and jobs go hand in hand. It pushed through auto fuel economy standards that deeply cut emissions. It also produced regulations on coal-fired power plants, though the rule was stymied by litigation and has been replaced with a weaker rule by the Trump administration.
Often overlooked, the Obama era stimulus package of 2009 included big investments in climate-friendly research and infrastructure. But Biden is also tethered to Obama’s “all-of-the-above” philosophy, which left ample room for the fracking boom that bolstered one fossil fuel, natural gas, over another, coal, and put the U.S. on track to become the world’s leading oil producer.
Getting Specific
- Biden surprised some activists and pundits in June when he presented his campaign’s first climate platform. It went further than many of his previous positions, and embraced the Green New Deal as a “crucial framework.”
- Biden foresees $1.7 trillion in spending over the next 10 years, and $3.3 trillion in investments by the private sector and state and local governments.
- He wants Congress to pass emissions limits with “an enforcement mechanism … based on the principles that polluters must bear the full cost of the carbon pollution they are emitting.” He said it would include “clear, legally-binding emissions reductions,” but did not give details.
- In July, Biden released a policy agenda that aims to boost the rural economy, in part by expanding a program that will pay farmers to use farming techniques that store carbon in the soil.
- His plan also calls for support for economically impacted communities. He was slow to agree with activists’ calls for him to swear off campaign contributions from fossil fuel interests, but did sign the No Fossil Fuel Funding pledge on June 27.
Our Take
Biden has signaled he will embrace central concepts of the Green New Deal—that the world needs to get net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 and that the environment and economy are connected. He was slower to do so, and for that reason he has faced criticism from young, impatient voters.
That compounds the challenge of explaining Senate votes that took place a long time ago. But Biden is known for his ability to communicate with blue-collar voters who abandoned Democrats for Trump, as well as older voters who have turned out in the past.
Read Joe Biden’s climate platform.
Read more candidate profiles.
veryGood! (96167)
Related
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Mysterious morel mushrooms at center of food poisoning outbreak
- Supreme Court to hear abortion pill case
- Geminids meteor shower peaks this week under dark skies
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- New Hampshire attorney general files second complaint against white nationalist group
- 24 Games to Keep Everyone Laughing at Your Next Game Night
- The White House is hosting nearly 100 US lawmakers to brainstorm gun violence prevention strategies
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- State tax collectors push struggling people deeper into hardship
Ranking
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- New Mexico lawmakers ask questions about spending by university president and his wife
- The Netherlands, South Korea step up strategic partnership including cooperation on semiconductors
- Rare red-flanked bluetail bird spotted for the first time in the eastern US: See photos
- Bodycam footage shows high
- Colorado authorities identify 4 people found dead following reported shooting inside home
- The U.S. May Not Have Won Over Critics in Dubai, But the Biden Administration Helped Keep the Process Alive
- Virginia county approves data center project after 27-hour public hearing
Recommendation
Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
Man allegedly involved in shootout that left him, 2 Philadelphia cops wounded now facing charges
The Netherlands, South Korea step up strategic partnership including cooperation on semiconductors
Forget 'hallucinate' and 'rizz.' What should the word of the year actually be?
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
Warriors star Draymond Green suspended indefinitely by NBA
News outlets and NGOs condemn Hungary’s new ‘sovereignty protection’ law as a way to silence critics
Attacks on referees could kill soccer, top FIFA official Pierluigi Collina says