The
results reveal the tricky politics around energy and the
environment as lawmakers debate whether the twin economic and
health crises sweeping the globe are an opportunity to speed the
transition from fossil fuels.
The poll shows 36% of Americans believe the U.S. Congress should
prioritize clean-energy industries and businesses in the next
stimulus package, including 53% of Democrats and 18% of
Republicans.
Another 36% believe Congress should prioritize the most
productive industries and businesses regardless of environmental
impact, including 24% of Democrats and 57% of Republicans,
according to the survey.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll was conducted online from June 22-23 in
the United States, and includes responses from 1,115 adults.
Congressional and White House representatives are in talks on a
new stimulus package to be taken up next month. The government
passed an initial $2 trillion round in March.
Some 60 Democratic lawmakers recently called in a letter to
colleagues for the new package to include measures "to spur
growth in renewable energy, energy storage, energy efficiency,
clean vehicles, clean and efficient infrastructure, clean fuels,
and workforce development."
Republicans have pushed back arguing stimulus should address
economic damage from the pandemic, not advance a clean energy
transition.
Climate change is a central consideration in Europe's economic
recovery after the pandemic. On Tuesday, Germany's environment
minister announced the country will use its upcoming presidency
of the European Union to steer the bloc toward a
climate-friendly economic recovery.
Meanwhile, China is running the risk https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-china-climate-anal/chinas-post-pandemic-economic-stimulus-puts-2020-climate-pledges-at-risk-idUSKBN22W0YW
of slipping on commitments to reduce carbon emissions as it
turns to heavy industry and carbon-intensive projects to shore
up its coronavirus-stricken economy.
(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici; Editing by David Gregorio)
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