By Nneka Nwogwugwu
Joe Biden has signed two executive orders related to climate change, a move that environmental activists say heralds an administration that is ready to take bold steps to undo the damage done over the past four years.
This came hours after his inauguration on Wednesday.
The experts pointed out that the executive orders signed is serious about the commitments made on the campaign trail to prioritize climate action, said Andrea Marpillero-Colomina, a clean transportation advocate for GreenLatin.
“The administration is sending a message, and it’s really exciting and important that these conversations are happening so early,” Marpillero-Colomina said.
“My hope is that these actions are just the beginning of a sustained climate-oriented agenda.”
On the updated White House website, climate change is second on a list of the administration’s priorities. But faced with a raging pandemic that has already killed more than 400,000 people in the U.S., racial inequalities, economic uncertainty and a deeply divided nation, the Biden administration will have its hands full.
In his inaugural address, Biden referred to these “cascading crises,” saying: “We face an attack on our democracy and on truth. A raging virus, growing inequity, the sting of systemic racism, a climate in crisis. Any one is enough to challenge us in ways. The fact is we face them all at once, presenting this nation with one of the gravest responsibilities we’ve had. Now we’re going to be tested.”
But the realities of climate change demand urgent action, particularly in the wake of Donald Trump’s presidency, when climate change was rarely addressed or even acknowledged, Marpillero-Colomina said.
“This is sort of a wakeup call for this country,” she said. “The impact of not participating in climate conversations over the past four years has been really evident across the board, both domestically and in our foreign policy relationships.”
Indeed, Biden has indicated that he plans to restore many of the environmental rules and regulations that were rolled back by the Trump administration. Michael Mann, author of the book “The New Climate War” and a professor and climatologist at Penn State University, said those efforts will be crucial because the U.S. needs to make up for lost time.
“This administration has to hit the ground running, because we’re four years down the road not having made the progress that we ought to have made,” Mann said. “That means we’re going to have to work even.
Rejoining the Paris Agreement will help restore the country’s credibility, but Biden will also have to set an example by pushing for even more aggressive emissions targets to avert the most damaging impacts of climate change.
“The current commitments under the Paris Agreement are not enough to keep us below 1.5 degrees Celsius of planetary warming,” Mann said. “It will be incumbent on the United States to display leadership to keep warming below catastrophic levels. What I would like to see over the next 100 days is language that speaks to our commitment to substantially ratchet up our obligations under the Paris accord.”