It’s great to have a president who wants to do something about climate change.
Biden committed the US to cut greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030, and many Republicans were quick to blast the move.
— New Day (@NewDay) April 23, 2021
But confronting the climate crisis wasn’t always a partisan issue. @JohnAvlon takes us through a brief history of climate denial in today’s #RealityCheck pic.twitter.com/H77ooWjBkF
"The stark dangers of a warming planet, coupled with the breakthroughs in low-cost, zero-carbon technologies, are convincing political and business leaders not to be left behind in the great global energy transformation" | Jeffrey Sachs for @CNNOpinion https://t.co/riRjn1SK8K
— CNN (@CNN) April 23, 2021
Biden plan on climate could be source of job creation for Black America via @AprilDRyan https://t.co/hdAWrEEcx6
— Jennifer Molina (@JenMolina46) April 23, 2021
With some business leaders on board, Biden’s climate agenda argument:
— Jonathan Lemire (@JonLemire) April 23, 2021
Pouring trillions of dollars into clean-energy technology, research and infrastructure will jet-pack a competitive U.S. economy into the future and create jobs, while saving the planet https://t.co/5vupCqJq97
Analysis: The warming of the planet is a function of a build-up of gases in the atmosphere. Here are the basics of how it works. https://t.co/PGqEvWNfsq
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) April 22, 2021
Limiting pollution will require big, systemic changes — to power our homes and industry, grow our food, and move us around without fossil fuels. #EarthDay https://t.co/F5FTv0gqnt
— Rolling Stone (@RollingStone) April 22, 2021
Biden’s ambitious climate pledges come down to one main question: How much greener can he make the U.S. power grid?https://t.co/3dF3evcAOo
— POLITICO (@politico) April 22, 2021
Perspective: Americans want climate solutions. Why won’t our politicians deliver? https://t.co/0XqTF2ZH1U
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) April 22, 2021
Global carbon dioxide emissions are set to surge dangerously this year as the global economy undergoes a huge recovery. https://t.co/L2eqosLXg6
— CNN (@CNN) April 21, 2021
⚡️ “The clock's running out on climate change. Some say it’s time for giant carbon vacuums”https://t.co/Z3XPF9ofHj
— Los Angeles Times (@latimes) April 19, 2021
“Black Americans are exposed to more pollution from every type of source, including industry, agriculture, all manner of vehicles, construction, residential sources and even emissions from restaurants.” From @HirokoTabuchi & @PopovichN https://t.co/BGZYI57nKc
— Christopher Flavelle (@cflav) April 28, 2021