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President Joe Biden has announced a US target to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 61-66% below 2005 levels by 2035, with White House officials saying the new goal can be achieved even if climate-change sceptic Donald Trump tries to roll back the country’s climate-action agenda.

With just a month to go until President-elect Trump takes office, the outgoing administration called its updated Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) under the Paris Agreement “ambitious and achievable” thanks to federal investments made in the last four years under Biden, including through the Inflation Reduction Act, and policies introduced at state level.

Donald Trump has indicated he may pull the US out of the Paris Agreement again – something he did during his previous term in the White House – and is likely to undo many green policies and encourage more fossil fuel production.

But John Podesta, senior advisor to Biden for international climate policy, told journalists that the “investments under this administration are durable and will continue to pay dividends for our economy and our climate for years to come”.

That is because the strategy has been led by the private sector, which has announced over $450 billion in clean energy investments, he added on a call before the new target was unveiled on Thursday.

“While the United States federal government under President Trump may put climate action on the back burner, the work to contain climate change is going to continue in the United States with commitment and passion and belief,” he said.

The United Nations has asked all countries to submit more ambitious national climate plans by February next year, including 2035 emissions-cutting targets, in an effort to put the world on track to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius as governments agreed to do under the 2015 Paris pact.

State leaders step up

Podesta urged local government officials – including governors and mayors – as well as business leaders to carry climate action forward and “show how many Americans still care about the future of our planet”.

The US is not currently on track to meet its existing goal of slashing greenhouse gas emissions by between 50% and 52% by 2030, according to several independent assessments.

Tell us your top three climate issues for 2025! We’ll share the results in the New Year

Announcing the new NDC, White House climate policy official Ali Zaidi said the 2035 target puts the US on a trajectory to reach net zero by 2050, meaning that the country “will do its part to keep [the Paris Agreement goal of] 1.5 degrees alive”.

Rachel Cleetus, policy director and lead economist for the climate and energy programme at the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), said that “while falling short of what the science requires”, the 2035 goal and plan to get there provides “an important benchmark to propel further climate action by cities, states, Tribal nations, and businesses”.

Manish Bapna, president of the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), a US think-tank, said the new emissions-reduction target can “serve as a North Star” for all those actors that are “ready to accelerate progress outside of Washington”.

Twenty-four state governors united under the “US Climate Alliance” pledged on Thursday to work together to achieve the NDC. Lujan Grisham, the Democratic governor of New Mexico and co-chair of the alliance, said “the only thing clearer than the science and impacts of climate change is the benefit of taking action – and we’re not slowing down”.

A recent study by the University of Maryland’s Center for Global Sustainability indicated that the US could reduce emissions by 54-62% by 2035, relying only on “strong” climate action from non-federal actors.

Senior US administration officials said their own analysis of the potential for clean energy technologies to achieve cost-effective emissions cuts backed this up. But one noted “the higher ends of this [2035] range require the federal government to do what a responsible federal government would do in the face of an existential risk and the biggest economic opportunity the world has ever seen to invest in America”.

‘Drill, baby, drill’

The wider NDC document filed with the UN climate change body on Thursday does not contain any concrete plans to reduce fossil fuel production, while only name-checking the global agreement to “transition away from fossil fuels in energy systems” reached at COP28 in Dubai last year.

In 2023, the US was the world’s largest producer of crude oil and the biggest exporter of liquefied natural gas (LNG).

Oil extraction at sunset in an oil field in Midland, Texas. REUTERS/Nick Oxford. Climate leaders, oil bosses pitch alternate energy-transition realities

Oil extraction at sunset in an oil field in Midland, Texas. REUTERS/Nick Oxford

After taking office, Donald Trump is expected to spur more oil and gas development.

Karoline Leavitt, a spokeswoman for the Trump transition team, told Fox News this week that Trump would issue executive orders “to drill, baby, drill,” and “to expedite permits for drilling and for fracking all over this country” immediately after his inauguration.

The United Arab Emirates and Brazil – among the handful of countries that have announced new NDCs this year – also left out any commitment to cut their oil and gas output, while the UK has set a 2035 target but not yet outlined its plans to reach the goal. The Labour government, which took power in July, has ruled out issuing new oil and gas licences for the North Sea.

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Ashfaq Khalfan, climate justice director at Oxfam America, said the new US NDC “ignores critical targets for phasing out fossil fuel production and fails to commit funds to help disadvantaged communities in the Global South”.

It “represents the bare minimum floor for climate action”, he added.

(Reporting by Matteo Civillini; editing by Megan Rowling)

The post President Biden sets US emissions goal for 2035 in the shadow of Trump appeared first on Climate Home News.

President Biden sets US emissions goal for 2035 in the shadow of Trump

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Hurricane Helene Is Headed for Georgians’ Electric Bills

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A new storm recovery charge could soon hit Georgia Power customers’ bills, as climate change drives more destructive weather across the state.

Hurricane Helene may be long over, but its costs are poised to land on Georgians’ electricity bills. After the storm killed 37 people in Georgia and caused billions in damage in September 2024, Georgia Power is seeking permission from state regulators to pass recovery costs on to customers.

Hurricane Helene Is Headed for Georgians’ Electric Bills

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Amid Affordability Crisis, New Jersey Hands $250 Million Tax Break to Data Center

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Gov. Mikie Sherrill says she supports both AI and lowering her constituents’ bills.

With New Jersey’s cost-of-living “crisis” at the center of Gov. Mikie Sherrill’s agenda, her administration has inherited a program that approved a $250 million tax break for an artificial intelligence data center.

Amid Affordability Crisis, New Jersey Hands $250 Million Tax Break to Data Center

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Curbing methane is the fastest way to slow warming – but we’re off the pace

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Gabrielle Dreyfus is chief scientist at the Institute for Governance and Sustainable Development, Thomas Röckmann is a professor of atmospheric physics and chemistry at Utrecht University, and Lena Höglund Isaksson is a senior research scholar at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis.

This March scientists and policy makers will gather near the site in Italy where methane was first identified 250 years ago to share the latest science on methane and the policy and technology steps needed to rapidly cut methane emissions. The timing is apt.

As new tools transform our understanding of methane emissions and their sources, the evidence they reveal points to a single conclusion: Human-caused methane emissions are still rising, and global action remains far too slow.

This is the central finding of the latest Global Methane Status Report. Four years into the Global Methane Pledge, which aims for a 30% cut in global emissions by 2030, the good news is that the pledge has increased mitigation ambition under national plans, which, if fully implemented, could result in the largest and most sustained decline in methane emissions since the Industrial Revolution.

The bad news is this is still short of the 30% target. The decisive question is whether governments will move quickly enough to turn that bend into the steep decline required to pump the brake on global warming.

What the data really show

Assessing progress requires comparing three benchmarks: the level of emissions today relative to 2020, the trajectory projected in 2021 before methane received significant policy focus, and the level required by 2030 to meet the pledge.

The latest data show that global methane emissions in 2025 are higher than in 2020 but not as high as previously expected. In 2021, emissions were projected to rise by about 9% between 2020 and 2030. Updated analysis places that increase closer to 5%. This change is driven by factors such as slower than expected growth in unconventional gas production between 2020 and 2024 and lower than expected waste emissions in several regions.

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This updated trajectory still does not deliver the reductions required, but it does indicate that the curve is beginning to bend. More importantly, the commitments already outlined in countries’ Nationally Determined Contributions and Methane Action Plans would, if fully implemented, produce an 8% reduction in global methane emissions between 2020 and 2030. This would turn the current increase into a sustained decline. While still insufficient to reach the Global Methane Pledge target of a 30% cut, it would represent historical progress.

Solutions are known and ready

Scientific assessments consistently show that the technical potential to meet the pledge exists. The gap lies not in technology, but in implementation.

The energy sector accounts for approximately 70% of total technical methane reduction potential between 2020 and 2030. Proven measures include recovering associated petroleum gas in oil production, regular leak detection and repair across oil and gas supply chains, and installing ventilation air oxidation technologies in underground coal mines. Many of these options are low cost or profitable. Yet current commitments would achieve only one third of the maximum technically feasible reductions in this sector.

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Agriculture and waste also provide opportunities. Rice emissions can be reduced through improved water management, low-emission hybrids and soil amendments. While innovations in technology and practices hold promise in the longer term, near-term potential in livestock is more constrained and trends in global diets may counteract gains.

Waste sector emissions had been expected to increase more rapidly, but improvements in waste management in several regions over the past two decades have moderated this rise. Long-term mitigation in this sector requires immediate investment in improved landfills and circular waste systems, as emissions from waste already deposited will persist in the short term.

New measurement tools

Methane monitoring capacity has expanded significantly. Satellite-based systems can now identify methane super-emitters. Ground-based sensors are becoming more accessible and can provide real-time data. These developments improve national inventories and can strengthen accountability.

However, policy action does not need to wait for perfect measurement. Current scientific understanding of source magnitudes and mitigation effectiveness is sufficient to achieve a 30% reduction between 2020 and 2030. Many of the largest reductions in oil, gas and coal can be delivered through binding technology standards that do not require high precision quantification of emissions.

The decisive years ahead

The next 2 years will be critical for determining whether existing commitments translate into emissions reductions consistent with the Global Methane Pledge.

Governments should prioritise adoption of an effective international methane performance standard for oil and gas, including through the EU Methane Regulation, and expand the reach of such standards through voluntary buyers’ clubs. National and regional authorities should introduce binding technology standards for oil, gas and coal to ensure that voluntary agreements are backed by legal requirements.

One approach to promoting better progress on methane is to develop a binding methane agreement, starting with the oil and gas sector, as suggested by Barbados’ PM Mia Mottley and other leaders. Countries must also address the deeper challenge of political and economic dependence on fossil fuels, which continues to slow progress. Without a dual strategy of reducing methane and deep decarbonisation, it will not be possible to meet the Paris Agreement objectives.

Mottley’s “legally binding” methane pact faces barriers, but smaller steps possible

The next four years will determine whether available technologies, scientific evidence and political leadership align to deliver a rapid transition toward near-zero methane energy systems, holistic and equity-based lower emission agricultural systems and circular waste management strategies that eliminate methane release. These years will also determine whether the world captures the near-term climate benefits of methane abatement or locks in higher long-term costs and risks.

The Global Methane Status Report shows that the world is beginning to change course. Delivering the sharper downward trajectory now required is a test of political will. As scientists, we have laid out the evidence. Leaders must now act on it.

The post Curbing methane is the fastest way to slow warming – but we’re off the pace appeared first on Climate Home News.

Curbing methane is the fastest way to slow warming – but we’re off the pace

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