WHITE HOUSE
U.S. infrastructure to headline global climate talks
President Biden confronted Republican hostility toward his $2.3 trillion infrastructure package yesterday by declaring it a pillar of his climate plan.
Advertisement
Scott Waldman, E&E News reporter
President Biden confronted Republican hostility toward his $2.3 trillion infrastructure package yesterday by declaring it a pillar of his climate plan.
President Biden used his first international conference to show world leaders that the United States has significant new climate ambitions and pressed other countries to go beyond their current plans.
By Scott Waldman in Greenwire
Coal will need to disappear, car and building electrification must accelerate, and oil use has to wane if the U.S. hopes to cut its emissions in half over the next decade, experts say.
By Benjamin Storrow in Climatewire
President Biden used his first international conference to show world leaders that the United States has significant new climate ambitions and pressed other countries to go beyond their current plans.
By Scott Waldman in Greenwire
Coal will need to disappear, car and building electrification must accelerate, and oil use has to wane if the U.S. hopes to cut its emissions in half over the next decade, experts say.
By Benjamin Storrow in Climatewire