US
president says country is already paying price of inaction and backs nuclear
energy and fracking in comprehensive strategy
guardian.co.uk,
Suzanne Goldenberg, US environment correspondent, 25 June 2013
Barack Obama has taken an historic step forward in confronting climate change, asserting his power as US president to cut carbon pollution and protect future generations from catastrophic global warming.
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Barack Obama addresses students at Georgetown University. 'I refuse to condemn your generation and future generations to a planet that's beyond fixing,' he said. Photograph: Michael Reynolds/EPA |
Barack Obama has taken an historic step forward in confronting climate change, asserting his power as US president to cut carbon pollution and protect future generations from catastrophic global warming.
In a speech
on Tuesday at Georgetown University, delivered outdoors on a sweltering hot
day, Obama went further than any previous US president in outlining a
comprehensive strategy for dealing with climate change. He also said he would
continue to press the issue as a priority of his second term even in the face
of implacable opposition from Republicans in Congress.
"I
refuse to condemn your generation and future generations to a planet that's
beyond fixing," Obama said to a gathering of students.
The high
costs of climate change were already apparent, Obama said, in hurricanes,
droughts, and wildfire. "Americans across the country are already paying
the price of inaction," he said.
He went on
to reaffirm America's commitment to cutting its greenhouse gas emissions by 17%
from 2005 levels by the end of the decade.
Obama
outlined a broad range of measures to cut greenhouse gas emissions and promote
the development of renewable energy, protect coastlines and cities from
flooding and sea-level rise, and encourage efforts to reach a global climate
deal.
But his
boldest move by far was the decision to bypass a deadlocked Congress and issue
an executive memo to the Environmental Protection Agency, calling for new rules
curbing greenhouse gas emissions from power plants.
Obama said
it was well past the time to stop the "limitless dumping of carbon
pollution" from coal-fired power plants. "It's not right, it's not
safe and it needs to stop," he said.
Power
plants are responsible for a third of America's greenhouse gas emissions.
Campaigners had been pressing Obama for a year to curb emissions for coal-fired
power plants.
However,
the measure ran into fierce opposition from Republicans and industry, even
before Obama had delivered his speech.
Obama took
on another contentious issue – the Keystone tar sands pipeline, which
campaigners have cast as the defining environmental issue of the day.
The
president gave no indication of how he will decide on the project, which would
open up Canada's vast store of carbon. However, he offered campaigners a
measure of reassurance, saying climate implications would be critical to making
a final determination. "The net effects of pipeline impact on our climate
will be absolutely critical in determining if the project is allowed to go
forward," he said.
However,
not all of Obama's speech will prove popular with environmental campaigners, or
even his fellow Democrats.
The
president embraced America's natural gas boom, made possible through fracking,
as a transition fuel. He also reiterated support for nuclear power.
As some
analysts noted, Obama failed to mention putting a price on carbon dioxide
emissions. White House officials have flatly rejected a "carbon tax",
and there was no indication whether Obama would support a version of a carbon
tax now pending in the Senate.
But there
was overwhelmingly strong support among an environmental community that has
often been frustrated and disappointed with the president on climate change.
"They
are following through on what we asked for," said Kevin Kennedy, who
directs the US climate programme for the World Resources Institute. "You
can't be serious about reducing US greenhouse gas emissions if you are not
going to take on existing power plants."
The Sierra
Club, which has pushed Obama hard to reject the Keystone XL pipeline, was
effusive. "This is the change Americans have been waiting for on climate.
President Obama is finally putting action behind his words," said Michael
Brune, executive director of the Sierra Club – although he went on to ask the
president to stop the pipeline.
Obama
claimed climate change as one of his core issues in his inauguration address.
He stoked expectations even further in his state of the union address in February,
telling Congress to act on climate change – or he would.
Since then,
however, there have been mixed signals from the White House on climate change.
The White House delayed a range of environmental rules, and Obama told
supporters at a number of fundraisers that the politics of climate change were
hard.
With
Tuesday's speech, however, Obama appears to have firmly adopted climate action
as his own brand.
The
significance of Tuesday's strategy, however, will only become apparent in time.
Administration
officials briefing reporters on the climate plan said the White House hoped to
propose the rules for existing power plants by June 2014, finalising the rules
one year later. They said proposed rules for new plants could be forthcoming as
early as September.
That
timetable could set in place mechanisms to deliver meaningful cuts in
greenhouse gas emissions by the time Obama leaves office.
But there
are bound to be legal and political challenges, and it was not immediately
clear how stringent the new power plant rules would be.
It was also
unclear how the actions promised by Obama would play out in the long term.
Most
analysts believed at the time that America's original 17% emissions target was
too low to avoid serious climate change. There was even greater uncertainty
about whether America would be on track for the even more ambitious mid-century
target of an 80% cut in emissions. That would depend on the stringency of the
EPA measures, and how quickly the new rules could be adopted, Kennedy said.
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