Factbox: On climate, it's Biden's green revolution versus Trump's war on
regulations
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[October 29, 2020]
By Timothy Gardner and Valerie Volcovici
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Next Tuesday's U.S.
presidential election pits a politician who plans to tie the country's
economic recovery to tackling climate change against another determined
to remove as many regulatory hurdles to oil, gas and coal production as
possible.
Republican President Donald Trump has focused on dismantling Democratic
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.
Democratic challenger Joe Biden, who was Obama's vice president, has
broadened his strategy to tackle climate change with a focus on building
green infrastructure to reinvigorate the U.S. economy, which is reeling
from the worldwide coronavirus pandemic.
Here are some of the major issues at play in Tuesday's election.
CLIMATE PLANS
Biden, heeding calls from his party's progressives for a faster
transition away from fossil fuels, has proposed $2 trillion in spending
over his first four-year term and aims to achieve 100% clean electricity
by 2035.
In the last presidential debate on Oct. 22, Biden said he would
"transition from the oil industry," a comment Trump pounced on, saying
Biden would destroy the business. Later, Biden told reporters fossil
fuels would be around for a long time and that he had been referring to
a plan to kill subsidies for the fuels.
Biden's proposals include upgrading 4 million buildings for energy
efficiency, building 1.5 million energy-efficient homes and public
housing, and investing in public transportation in cities with over
100,000 residents.
Power utilities have pointed out that his plan depends on rapid advances
in nascent technologies.
Biden supports research on high-tech nuclear energy that would be
virtually emissions-free but could still have proliferation risks.
Trump does not have a climate plan on his campaign website. Instead, the
site highlights his administration's focus on unraveling Obama-era
regulations. This includes the Clean Power Plan, which he replaced with
a weaker standard called Affordable Clean Energy. He says it would cut
pollution without damaging the coal industry.
Trump has rejected mainstream science on climate. In September he
refused to acknowledge any role climate change has played in deadly
wildfires that swept through the U.S. West. Biden called Trump a
"climate arsonist" after he blamed the fires on lax forestry.
Like Biden, Trump supports advanced nuclear technology.
AUTO EMISSIONS
Biden wants to strengthen auto emission standards set during the Obama
administration. Trump, who had called the regulations "industry
killing," replaced the standards with weaker ones in March.
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Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden and U.S. President Donald
Trump participate in their second 2020 presidential campaign debate
at Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S., October 22,
2020. REUTERS/Jim Bourg/Pool
Biden has also proposed incentives for auto manufacturers to produce
zero-emission cars, a federal procurement program for clean
vehicles, and set a goal for all new American-built buses to be
zero-emission by 2030. He has also called for the installation of
500,000 electric vehicle charging stations by 2030 and ending fossil
fuel subsidies.
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% last year
to the lowest level since 1975.
Trump is also focused on protecting drilling and other fossil fuel
industries, a major source of blue-collar jobs.
Biden has resisted a push by his party's liberal wing to impose a
nationwide ban on fracking, though he proposes banning new oil and
gas permitting on federal lands and waters. Fracking produces fuels
that emit 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 Climate Agreement that brought countries together to
mitigate global warming, saying it was too costly.
Biden has said he will return the United States to a leadership role
on climate change, assertively restoring a U.S. role in future
climate negotiations to advance the goals of the Paris Climate
Agreement.
He has said he brought China's President Xi Jinping on board with
the Paris pact, a claim some former Obama administration officials
have said was overstated. 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, Valerie Volcovici and Trevor
Hunnicutt; Editing by Colleen Jenkins, Richard Valdmanis, Dan
Grebler and Jonathan Oatis)
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