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		Factbox: On climate, it's Biden's green revolution versus Trump's war on 
		red tape
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		 [July 14, 2020] 
		By Timothy Gardner 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. 
		presidential election pits a politician who supports environmental 
		regulation and diplomacy to tackle climate change against another 
		determined to dismantle such policies.
 
 President Donald Trump, a Republican, has focused on dismantling former 
		President Barack Obama's climate agenda to free the energy and auto 
		industries from the costs of regulations meant to protect health and the 
		environment.
 
 Joe Biden, a Democrat who was a senator before becoming Obama's vice 
		president, introduced one of the earliest bills on climate change in 
		1986 and envisions a diplomatic push to engage the world in reducing 
		coal dependence. Even so, many environmentalists and liberals in his 
		party have demanded he adopt more aggressive stances that call for a 
		quicker end to all fossil fuels.
 
 Biden is expected to unveil a new economic recovery plan on Tuesday 
		focused on environmentally sustainable infrastructure and clean energy.
 
 Here are some of the major climate issues at play in the Nov. 3 
		election.
 
		
		 
		
 CLIMATE PLANS
 
 Biden touts a $1.7 trillion plan to set the United States on a course to 
		achieve 100% clean energy and net-zero emissions by 2050. Dubbed the 
		Clean Energy Revolution, his proposal calls for the installation of 
		500,000 electric vehicle charging stations by 2030, ending fossil fuel 
		subsidies and providing $400 billion for research and development in 
		clean technology. He supports research into high-tech nuclear energy 
		that would be virtually emissions free, but likely still have waste 
		issues.
 
 Biden has worked with Democrats who called on him to strengthen his 2019 
		plan, including a task force co-chaired by liberal Representative 
		Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez that made a series of policy recommendations in 
		July to speed up the transition away from fossil fuels.
 
 Biden also appointed an advisory council including philanthropist and 
		environmentalist Tom Steyer on how to win the support voters who are 
		focused on climate and efforts to protect minority communities on the 
		frontline of air and water pollution.
 
 Trump does not have a climate plan on his campaign website, but an 
		energy and environment section highlights his administration's focus on 
		unraveling Obama-era regulations. This includes the Clean Power Plan, 
		which was later upheld by the courts, and a plan to curb emissions of 
		methane, a powerful greenhouse gas that leaks from oil-and-gas 
		operations.
 
		Trump has rejected mainstream science on climate and said in April, "Our 
		carbon, our atmosphere, our - the level of environmental cleanliness is 
		at its all-time best right now" - an inaccurate claim. Like Biden, he 
		supports advanced nuclear technology.
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			President Donald Trump refers to amounts of temperature change as he 
			announces his decision that the United States will withdraw from the 
			landmark Paris Climate Agreement, in the Rose Garden of the White 
			House in Washington, U.S., June 1, 2017. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque 
            
 
            AUTO EMISSIONS
 Biden wants to strengthen auto emission standards formed during the 
			Obama administration. Trump, who had called the regulations 
			"industry killing," replaced the standards with weaker ones in 
			March.
 
 BLUE-COLLAR WORKERS
 
 Trump had a vision of a renaissance in "beautiful clean coal," the 
			fuel that emits the most carbon dioxide when burned, and invited 
			miners to the White House in early 2017 as his administration 
			announced plans to slash air and water regulations.
 
 But due to abundant natural gas and falling prices for wind and 
			solar power, Trump has failed to stop coal plant shutdowns during 
			his term in office. Coal-fired electricity output fell 18% to the 
			lowest level since 1975 last year.
 
 Biden has resisted a push by his party's liberal wing to impose a 
			nationwide ban on fracking. The drilling technique increases 
			emissions of gases linked to climate change but supports jobs across 
			the country and has allowed the United States to become the world's 
			top oil-and-gas producer. Biden also supports investing in coal 
			communities by offering alternatives to mining work.
 
 CLIMATE DIPLOMACY
 
 Trump put in motion a process to remove the United States, the 
			world's No. 2 emitter of greenhouse gases behind China, from the 
			2015 Paris agreement on climate that brought countries together to 
			mitigate global warming, saying it was too costly.
 
 
            
			 
			Biden has said he brought China on board the Paris pact, a claim 
			that has reportedly been disputed by some former Obama officials. 
			Now Biden wants to make a diplomatic push to persuade China to stop 
			financing coal plants through its belt-and-road initiative.
 
 (Reporting by Timothy Gardner; Additional reporting by Trevor 
			Hunnicutt; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)
 
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