Biden considers former EPA chief McCarthy for domestic climate czar
-sources
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[December 14, 2020]
By Jarrett Renshaw and Valerie Volcovici
Wilmington, Del.co2 (Reuters)
-President-elect Joe Biden is considering appointing Gina McCarthy, who
headed the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in the Obama
administration, as domestic "climate czar" in charge of coordinating
climate policies across federal agencies, according to two people
familiar with the plan.
Biden is also considering Michael Regan, an African American who runs
North Carolina's environmental agency, to run the EPA, the two sources
said.
If appointed, Regan would be a surprise choice over onetime front-runner
Mary Nichols, who is retiring from the California Air Resources Board,
as environmental justice activists and civil rights leaders push for
more diversity in the incoming administration.
The Biden transition team did not respond to requests for comment.
McCarthy, Regan and Nichols also did not respond to requests for
comment.
Biden has made tackling climate change a pillar of his upcoming
administration, seeking to restore the United States as a global leader
on the issue while forcing all federal agencies to rethink their roles
in tackling the problem.
Biden, who was vice president under President Barack Obama, selected
former Secretary of State John Kerry to serve as his global climate
czar, making him part of the U.S. national security team and charging
him with coordinating with other counties on the environment.
If selected, McCarthy, who currently serves as president of the Natural
Resources Defense Counsel, a leading national environmental group, would
serve as the domestic counterpart to Kerry. The position would not
require U.S. Senate confirmation.
Kerry and Brian Deese, Biden's pick to head the National Economic
Council, both worked under Obama and helped negotiate the Paris climate
accord, which the United States exited under Republican President Donald
Trump. Biden has vowed to rejoin the pact.
McCarthy was key to writing the Clean Power Plan, a signature Obama-era
measure that imposed the first-ever limits on carbon pollution from U.S.
power plants.
Former Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm is also under consideration,
the sources said.
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EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy speaks during a news conference,
accompanied by U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch, in Washington
U.S., January 11, 2017. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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Biden is expected to make a slate of announcements this week that
will be heavily scrutinized by the nation's environmental groups,
the sources say, including his pick to run the EPA, domestic climate
czar and the Interior Department.
The sources said the choices had not been finalized and the
situation remained fluid.
Nichols' nomination now looks less likely as the president-elect
seeks to diversify his Cabinet appointments, the sources said.
Dozens of environmental justice groups in California recently wrote
a letter to Biden opposing Nichols, saying she too often sided with
the industry. In an interview with Reuters last week, Nichols
defended herself against the criticism, calling it "disappointing"
and saying she stands by her work.
In recent days, Regan has emerged as a leading EPA candidate,
according to three sources familiar with the process. Regan has run
the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality since 2017
and has been part of the push to hold big companies like Duke Energy
Corp accountable for pollution.
Under his leadership at the North Carolina agency, Duke Energy
agreed to the largest coal ash cleanup in the United States in
January.
Collin O'Mara, a Biden adviser and chief executive of the National
Wildlife Federation, remains a possibility for the EPA, the sources
said.
(Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw; Additional reporting by Valerie
Volcovici in Washington Editing by Soyoung Kim and Peter Cooney)
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