This story originally appeared in the Guardian and is reproduced here as part of the ClimateDesk collaboration.
This was the year when
climate change came out of the closet.
Barack Obama
elevated climate change to one of his top presidential priorities.
White House and other officials brought up the topic in public after
spending the previous four years scuttling away from any mention of
climate change. Climate change became a factor in state elections and
there were polls suggesting even Republicans in the most conservative
states wanted to take measures to avoid a future of dangerous climate
change.
But it was also a year when Obama claimed as a personal achievement the expansion of
oil and
gas
production through hydraulic fracturing, and when the coal industry
sent coal overseas to rescue the mines closing down at home.
Barack Obama
used the January 21 inaugural address
for his second term in the White House to renew his commitment to
respond to the climate crisis "knowing that failure to do so would
betray our children and future generations".
He linked climate change to Hurricane Sandy and the other extreme weather events of 2012 and took a swipe at climate deniers.
He was even more forceful in his first
State of the Union address on February 12, seizing the moment to put Republicans on notice: "If Congress won't act soon to protect future generations, I will."
He said he would direct government, including the Environmental
Protection Agency, to use its authority to cut greenhouse gas emissions,
promote renewable
energy, and protect communities from future climate change.
Obama delivered on that promise on June 25 in another landmark speech in which he directed the Environmental Protection Agency to take measures to cut emissions from new and existing power plants.
The president also raised hopes that he would block the
Keystone XL pipeline,
which would open up new routes for crude from the Canadian tar sands,
saying he would weigh the project's climate impacts when making his
decision.
Power plants account for about 40 percent of America's carbon dioxide
emissions, the largest source of carbon pollution. The directive put
America back on track towards meeting its commitment to cut greenhouse
gas emissions 17 percent from 2005 levels by the end of this decade.
"This is the year when they really started acting," said Andrew
Steer, president of the World Resources Institute. "I see a little more
muscularity."
It was also, possibly, the year when climate change ceased to be seen as political poison.
In the Virginia governor's race, Democrat Terry McAuliffe ran
television ads attacking his opponent, Ken Cuccinelli, as a climate
change denier,
and won.
A number of polls suggested Republicans, even in conservative states,
were growing concerned about climate change and wanted action.
"We see a political dynamic in motion that is headed in a good
direction," Peter Altman, the climate director for the Natural Resources
Defense Council, told a conference call with reporters.
In the states, right-wing efforts to repeal regulations requiring
power companies to use wind and solar power were defeated in Kansas,
North Carolina, and Ohio.
Meanwhile, there was a steady beat of reminders of the dangers of
climate change. The year did not repeat the extremes of 2012, which
brought drought, Hurricane Sandy, and a string of extreme temperatures,
producing America's hottest year on record.
But there were still cases of the wild weather and wildfires that are expected to rise under climate change.
On June 30,
19 firefighters died fighting a wildfire near Yarnell, Arizona
that had been fuelled by strong winds, 38°C temperatures, and a drought
that has devastated the southwest. It was the biggest loss of life in a
wild-land fire since 1933.
A 200-mile swathe of Colorado
was left underwater after record rainfall in September. An
early blizzard in October dumped 60 cm of snow in a single day on South Dakota, killing tens of thousands of cattle.
Meanwhile, Gina McCarthy, the EPA administrator,
took a first step in September to cutting emissions from power plants,
requiring stricter pollution controls for future construction. The EPA
is expected to propose stricter standards for existing power plants in
June 2014.
Obama was taking action on climate change in the international arena
too. On June 8, Obama and the Chinese president, Xi Jinping,
agreed
to work with other countries to reduce the use of HFCs, the coolants
that are one of the most potent greenhouse gases. In November, US
negotiators played a constructive role in coming to an agreement
at the international climate talks in Warsaw.
"Does this all add up to solving the problem? No, we are nowhere near
close," Steer said. "We are still heading in the wrong direction. We
are still heading towards a world where temperatures will go up by
3°C…But we are going in the wrong direction less quickly than we were."
Beyond the political landscape, however, there were mixed signs. For
the first time, there were more new solar, wind, and other renewable
energy plants built than coal and oil combined. Warren Buffet's utility
ordered $1 billion worth of new wind turbines for Iowa, and 39 coal
plants shut down or announced plans to retire. No new coal plants came
on line.
But there was no let-up in the fracking boom that has turned America
into an energy superpower–and is burning up stores of carbon that
the UN's climate science panel said should be left in the ground to avoid a future climate disaster.
There were also few positive signs the EPA and other regulators were
getting out ahead and putting stronger controls on the oil and gas
industry. Campaigners urged the EPA to come out with strong controls on
leaks of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. They rued a decision by the
EPA to walk away from three earlier investigations of water
contamination linked to fracking.
"If you want to understand how people will remember the Obama climate
legacy, a few facts tell the tale: By the time Obama leaves office, the
US will pass Saudi Arabia as the planet's biggest oil producer and
Russia as the world's biggest producer of oil and gas combined," the
climate campaigner
Bill McKibben wrote in Rolling Stone.
"In the same years, even as we've begun to burn less coal at home,
our coal exports have climbed to record highs. We are, despite slight
declines in our domestic emissions, a global-warming machine: At the
moment when physics tell us we should be jamming on the carbon brakes,
America is revving the engine."
In other areas too, there was retreat or uncertainty. The Food and
Drug Administration continued to sit on a decision whether to allow the
first genetically modified food animal–
a fast growing salmon raised at an experimental research station in the hills of Panama.
Obama came out strongly for elephant conservation, ordering the
public destruction of America's cache of seized illegal ivory. But the
US Fish and Wildlife Service on December 16 proposed stripping grey
wolves of protections across the country. The federal government also
indicated it would move ahead to remove protections for grizzlies in the
Yellowstone area.
Conservationists said the decision could jeopardize the successful
effort to bring grey wolves back from the point of extinction.
"They are essentially abandoning wolf recovery before the job is
done," said Noah Greenwald, the endangered species director at the
Centre for Biological Diversity. "The numbers are just 1 percent of what
they were historically. In the areas where wolves did recover, it is a
small fraction of their former range, or even a small fraction of the
available habitat."
As the year drew to a close, however, there was a new note of
optimism when the experienced operative John Podesta returned to the
White House to guide its climate change efforts and other programs.
Podesta has a strong environmental record and campaigners thought he
would be able to pursue the climate change agenda more forcefully than
previous White House advisors.
But Obama had yet to prove himself on one of the biggest environmental decisions of his presidency: the Keystone XL pipeline.
"Whether he likes it or not, whether he kicks it down the road, this
decision on Keystone is his," said Betsy Taylor, a climate strategist
who has mobilized prominent Obama supporters to prevail on him to reject
the project. "This is one of the biggest decisions he is going to make,
and it is going to send a really strong signal to the world, especially
because he chose to frame it as carbon."
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