Analysis-Set free or set back? Manchin narrows Biden's climate options
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[July 16, 2022]
By Valerie Volcovici and Timothy Gardner
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Senator Joe Manchin's
decision to halt support for President Joe Biden's climate legislation
after more than a year of negotiations has left Democrats with limited
options to tackle climate change, an important goal for the president's
base.
The West Virginia senator, a conservative Democrat who is the biggest
recipient of donations from fossil fuel companies in Congress and who
owns a stake in a coal brokerage his son runs, left fellow Democrats
seething after he said he could not support new spending on climate
measures or tax increases. The decision came even as lawmakers came
close to a deal with Biden administration officials.
The latest talks were over $300 billion in tax credits for industries
including solar and wind power, carbon capture from power plants and
nuclear power which generates virtually emissions-free electricity. That
was down from about $555 billion in credits after Manchin, the pivotal
vote in the evenly divided Senate, said he raised concerns about the
effect of spending on inflation. He blocked the bill even though many of
its measures were designed to eventually reduce energy costs.
Clean energy industry advocates urged lawmakers to pass more narrow
legislation that would extend the solar and wind power tax incentives
crucial to the industry.
"It’s appalling that Congress missed this critical opportunity to
accelerate affordable, clean energy deployment over the next decade —
especially at a time when energy prices are crushing many Americans,"
said American Clean Power Chief Executive Heather Zichal.
Senator Ron Wyden, chair of the Senate Finance Committee said Manchin's
decision to walk away was frustrating since "nearly all issues in the
climate and energy space had been resolved." "We need to salvage as much
of this package as possible," Wyden said in a statement.
It was also a blow to Biden, who has been bleeding support from his core
constituency: young people and environmentalists key to his 2020
election. About 94% of Democrats under 30 said they want another
candidate to run for president in 2024, according to a New York Times
and Siena College survey published this week.
"I will not back down," Biden said in a statement issued on the day he
met with Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in talks in
which energy supply was on the agenda and as his administration was
eager to see Gulf oil producers boost output.
"If the Senate will not move to tackle the climate crisis and strengthen
our domestic clean energy industry, I will take strong executive action
to meet this moment."
Manchin told a West Virginia radio station on Friday he has not walked
away but wants to wait until July inflation figures and see whether the
Fed raises interest rates again before making final decisions on tax
incentives.
SET FREE?
Other clean energy advocates saw an opportunity for Biden to issue
executive actions rather than try to appease Manchin with concessions
like approving oil and gas projects.
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Steam rises from the coal-fired Jim Bridger power plant outside Rock
Springs, Wyoming, U.S. April 5, 2017. REUTERS/Jim Urquhart
“Free at last,” Senator Sheldon Whitehouse wrote on Twitter late
Thursday after Manchin said he would not support climate provisions
in the bill. "With legislative climate options now closed, it’s now
time for executive Beast Mode."
Whitehouse laid out 10 federal actions that the White House could
take to sidestep Congress and tackle climate policies using
executive authority -- though such actions could be reversed or
weakened by a future president.
Those range from requiring power and industrial plants to install
carbon capture technology and tightening limits on other air
pollutants from coal and gas-fired power plants. The Department of
Justice could pursue litigation against Big Oil, and the
administration could impose carbon border tariffs on imports from
countries that are more lax on climate than the United States.
The Supreme Court this month decided to effectively restrict the
Environmental Protection Agency from issuing emissions rules
involving matters of major "economic and political significance" --
potentially limiting executive actions.
But Jamal Raad, the head of nonprofit group Evergreen Action which
helped craft the legislation, said there are "still a lot of
existing authorities under the Clean Air Act" to take on pollutants
such as particulates from the power sector that can have the added
benefit of lowering carbon emissions.
Raad said Biden is now free to drop some of the items that were on
the table to win Manchin's support, such as preserving federal oil
and gas leasing and approving ConocoPhillips' Willow oil drilling
project in Alaska.
Other green groups urged Biden to declare a climate emergency and
use the Defense Production Act to advance clean technologies.
Absent the bill, the U.S. is poised to fall well below Biden's
pledge to slash greenhouse gas emissions by at least 50% below 2005
levels by 2030 -- achieving only a 24% to 35% cut, a report by
researchers at Rhodium Group this month said.
With limited options to achieve its target, the Biden
administration's role as a climate leader is undermined, said Alden
Meyer, international climate policy expert at E3G. The U.S. will
need to rely on states and cities to pick up the slack.
"With this failure of Congress to take responsible action, climate
leaders at all levels of society -- states, cities, business,
investors, and others -- will need to expand their already
substantial efforts, he said. But those action will not be
sufficient to meet Biden's 2030 pledge, he said.
(Reporting by Timothy Gardner; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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