climate-change

October 1, 2021

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- A premature attempt to vote on the Senate’s bipartisan infrastructure legislation in the House of Representatives did not happen, putting back on track President Biden’s bold Build Back Better agenda, including historic climate investments.

September 23, 2021

MEMO: Rushed vote on bipartisan bill set to fail over climate; Build Back Better Act is a must. The bipartisan infrastructure bill is on the verge of being voted down in the short term due in significant part to its failure to tackle the climate crisis without a companion reconciliation bill. Once again, Capitol Hill is being forced to reckon with “No Climate, No Deal.”

September 8, 2021

As Congress Prepares to Move Forward with Reconciliation Bill, Nonprofits and Legislators in Arizona  Urge Electric Sector Decarbonization Through a Clean Electricity Payment Program (CEPP)

 

September 2, 2021

A regional coalition of conservation groups commented on PacifiCorp’s 2021 Integrated Resource Plan that was filed today in the six states the utility serves, highlighting the plan’s failure to meet the recommendations of global scientists to transition away from all fossil fuels, as the utility intends to keep coal and gas generation in its resource mix well into the 2040s.

August 25, 2021

WASHINGTON, DC -- Yesterday, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, Whip Clyburn, and the entire Democratic leadership team in the House delivered victory by securing full Democratic support for a historic $3.5 trillion budget resolution. Passage of the resolution was a crucial first step toward delivering bold investments at the scale of the crises our communities face.

August 24, 2021

WASHINGTON, DC -- This afternoon, the House passed a $3.5 trillion budget resolution, a crucial step toward delivering bold investments at the scale of the crises our communities face. Sierra Club emphasizes that any vote on the bipartisan infrastructure proposal must be preceded by passage of the reconciliation bill.

August 13, 2021

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Nine House Democrats have threatened to halt progress on the most important climate legislation in U.S. history, and the only potential vehicle for major action on climate, care, jobs, and justice in near term view. This comes during the very same week when the IPCC warned that the extreme weather events we’re already experiencing -- including historic droughts and floods, superstorms, record-breaking wildfires, and unprecedented coastal flooding -- will continue to rapidly worsen unless the world cuts all carbon pollution in half by 2031.

August 11, 2021

WASHINGTON, DC -- Early this morning, the Senate passed a historic $3.5 trillion budget resolution with the potential to provide transformative investments in climate action as well as care, jobs, and justice priorities in the United States.

August 11, 2021

OUR PRIORITIES DETAILED BELOW: ACHIEVE 100% CLEAN ENERGY CLEAN ENERGY PAYMENT PROGRAM (CEPP) CLEAN ENERGY TAX INCENTIVES EXPAND ACCESS TO CLEAN PUBLIC TRANSIT, UNION-BUILT ELECTRIC VEHICLES, AND EV CHARGING INFRASTRUCTURE END FOSSIL FUEL SUBSIDIES & CLEAN UP ABANDONED MINES AND WELLS REPLACE 100% OF LEAD PIPES RETROFIT AND ELECTRIFY ALL PUBLIC HOUSING, SCHOOLS, AND HOSPITALS CREATE A CIVILIAN CLIMATE CORPS ANALYSIS OF BIPARTISAN DEAL

August 9, 2021

WASHINGTON, DC -- On the heels of a blockbuster Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report detailing prospects for our world’s climate future, new details on a pending $3.5 trillion Senate budget resolution make clear that final passage of the package would be the most significant investment in tackling the climate crisis in U.S. history, putting the country on a path to meet President Biden’s climate action goals of 80% clean electricity and 50% economy-wide carbon emissions reductions by 2030, while delivering 40% of the climate investments to disadvantaged communities.

9 de agosto de 2021

El Panel Intergubernamental sobre Cambio Climático (PICC) de la ONU emitió esta mañana sus conclusiones científicas en las que se basará su próximo gran reporte climático que se espera en 2022.

July 28, 2021

WASHINGTON, DC -- Today, Senators voted to proceed on debating narrow bipartisan infrastructure legislation, a sign of progress that President Biden and Democratic Congressional leadership are working to meet the needs of people in communities across America who are suffering from the increasing consequences of the climate crisis, decades of infrastructure neglect, and systemic inequity.