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Biden Wants to Spend Billions to Fight Climate Change. It’s Not Enough. His plan is too big to pass, and too small to work.

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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By Farhad Manjoo
Opinion Columnist
April 2, 2021, 5:00 a.m. ET


Joe Biden’s new infrastructure plan is far and away the most ambitious climate change idea ever proposed by an American president. Granted this is not an especially high bar: The $2 trillion plan announced on Wednesday may be the only major climate-focused proposal ever offered by an American president.
Still, Biden’s plan absolutely dwarfs the last big spending bill to address the climate, Barack Obama’s 2009 stimulus, which provided $90 billion in investments for clean energy. Biden would spend nearly that much just on public transit. He also calls for $174 billion for electric vehicle infrastructure; $80 billion to improve rail lines; $50 billion to strengthen essential services against severe weather; and $35 billion for climate-related research and development.
And that’s just on the climate. The White House’s fact sheet outlining the complete infrastructure proposal runs to 27 printed pages on my computer; the word “billion” appears 69 times. Reading through it can feel like watching a cheesy infomercial or an Oprah giveaway. Here’s $400 billion for home care workers, $300 billion for manufacturers, $100 billion for work force development — but wait, there’s more! The electric grid, water systems, broadband — you get $100 billion, and you get $100 billion, and you get $100 billion!
What I’m saying is, Biden’s proposal is gargantuan. And if a version manages to pass Congress at anywhere near its current scope, it would constitute a historic level of spending to mitigate the climate crisis and improve basic American services to a level above “crumbling.”
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Yet here is the stark shame of our current political moment: Huge as it sounds, the Biden plan is not nearly big enough. Rather than inspiring optimism, then, the vast size of the proposal sets up a disheartening conundrum for anyone looking forward to a habitable future on this fragile planet: Any plan bold enough to effectively address climate change seems unlikely to survive the American political system. And any bill that can survive our politics may not make enough of a dent on the climate.
A 2019 estimate by the Roosevelt Institute suggests it will take about $1 trillion in spending per year over at least 10 years to achieve a carbon-neutral American economy; several other estimates come to a similar conclusion. Part of the investment is likely to come from the private sector, but most will need to be from the government. Biden’s proposal is just a fifth of what the institute estimates is the minimum amount that the government needs to spend to stave off the worst projected dangers of a warming climate; at the high end of spending projections, it’s only an eighth.
Republicans are already balking at the cost of Biden’s plan — or, more precisely, they’re balking at the prospect of raising taxes on corporations to pay for it. Last month Democrats passed Biden’s $1.9 trillion Covid-19 recovery plan, and a huge infrastructure proposal seems to poll well with voters. But congressional Democrats from different factions are already calling for big changes to various parts of the plan, and the party doesn’t have much room to lose support in either the House or the Senate.
It isn’t just climate change that might be left behind when Congress is done chewing up Biden’s plan. I spent much of Wednesday afternoon talking about Biden’s ideas with advocates for public transit and other environmentally friendly transportation systems. They were giddy about the boldness of Biden’s proposals, especially its recognition that the nation is far too dependent on cars.
Among the bright spots: The plan calls for $115 billion in spending on roads and bridges, but unlike many previous highway-funding proposals, Biden’s plan emphasizes repairing roads before expanding them or building new ones. This is crucial because one of every five miles of roadway in America is rated in poor condition — but when given federal money for roads, states often spend a lot of it on expansion rather than repair.



This is counterproductive. New roads are often justified as a way to reduce traffic, but that’s not how traffic works — new and expanded roads tend to encourage more driving, just making congestion worse. New roads also make for more maintenance, adding to the backlog of repairs.
Another novelty in a federal highway bill is the proposal’s emphasis on road safety. It includes $20 billion to reduce crashes and fatalities “especially for cyclists and pedestrians,” constituencies that are often forgotten about in spending for cars. The plan also outlines many ideas to address racial equity, including a $20 billion program to redress the practice of building highways through Black neighborhoods.
But at the moment, Biden’s big ideas exist mainly as a fact sheet — there is no written bill yet, and in the sausage-making of transportation legislation, ambitious ideas are often left behind.
“Whether what they write at every step matches their rhetoric, that is the real question,” said Beth Osborne, the director of Transportation for America, an advocacy group. Osborne served as the deputy assistant secretary for transportation policy in the Obama administration, and she notes that Obama too called for repairing roads before expanding them. But she regrets that Obama’s progressive rhetoric on transportation policy did not translate to progressive legislation.
“Congress and the administration have been left off the hook — but no one ever called them on it, and no one ever does,” she told me. “I’m hoping this time they do.”
I am too. I plan to watch the process closely and I promise to throw a columnistic tantrum if the promises aren’t met. But it will likely take many months for a version of the package to wend its way through Congress, and public interest is likely to die down through the long slog. Given the mismatch between the scale of the crisis and the political will to do something big, I can’t say I’m very hopeful.

 
Because the problem is too large for a self absorbed human race to fix,.. just accept it.
Like I said...we're phvcked.

The only viable solution at this point is that when the warming starts destabilizing countries around the world, we'll do something like inject particulates into the upper atmosphere and nobody knows what the unintended consequences of that would be.
 
Like I said...we're phvcked.

The only viable solution at this point is that when the warming starts destabilizing countries around the world, we'll do something like inject particulates into the upper atmosphere and nobody knows what the unintended consequences of that would be.

The only viable way to really impact it quickly at this point would be for the entire human race to draw straws and determine who was going to be among the 50% to be put down...
 
The only viable way to really impact it quickly at this point would be for the entire human race to draw straws and determine who was going to be among the 50% to be put down...
Mom (pic) may have another far nastier pandemic waiting for us so that option is still on the table.

bluemarble3k-smaller-nasa_custom-644f0b7082d6d0f6814a9e82908569c07ea55ccb-s800-c85.jpg
 
Ultimately the planet will do what needs to be done to protect itself...
 
This may turn out to be true, but it isn't necessarily true.

If you were in charge, what would you do to change that dismal outlook?
We're headed for a brick wall at breakneck speed. The earlier we turn away the better but there's no way to avoid hitting the wall at this point even if we slammed on the brakes. The deniers prevented an early intervention that could have prevented a catastrophic outcome. Now they're switching to the argument that it's inevitable so we might as well crash headlong into the wall.

We're phvcked.
 
Because...
Because while our emissions have been going down China's have been going back up since 2016....decreased a bit between 2012-2016.


We kind of offset each other at the moment.

Not saying we don't have to attack the problem but when other parts of the world are still increasing I don't know how much effect we'll have.
 
China is planning to build 20-30 new coal fired power plants in the next few years. The U.S. will be wasting time and treasure fighting the weather and switching to unproven and less robust energy sources. We will be basically pissing in the wind just the way Beijing wants it.
 
China is planning to build 20-30 new coal fired power plants in the next few years. The U.S. will be wasting time and treasure fighting the weather and switching to unproven and less robust energy sources. We will be basically pissing in the wind just the way Beijing wants it.

When you're speeding toward a brick wall, the best strategy is to hit the gas! Amirite?
 
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When you're speeding toward a brick wall, the best strategy is to hit the gas! Amirite?
Yes but unfortunately for the U.S. we won’t have enough reliable energy sources to even get the car on the road to the wall. High fives all around in Beijing.
 
Yes but unfortunately for the U.S. we won’t have enough reliable energy sources to even get the car on the road to the wall. High fives all around in Beijing.
What the hell are you talking about? The simplest analogy stumps you like this?? smh
 
It's nearing time for Biden to declare a National Emergency on the climate crisis.

If Manchin and Sinema ever do agree to pass some chunk of the Build Back Better package, it's unlikely to have much in it to address climate change. Maybe some mitigation. Nothing that might upset Big Oil.

Of course we're all distracted by the possibility of a Ukraine war, cold weather, abortion, inflation, and celebrity gossip. So who has time for something that will merely make the world a much harder place to survive in?
 
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The American Rescue Plan and the Transportation bill both had climate change initiatives in them…..

More needs to be done but we’ve already made investments in that direction

 
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