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Pete Buttigieg wants the US to be carbon-neutral by the time he’s 68

The South Bend mayor’s new climate change plan sets ambitious targets and includes small towns and rural areas.

Pete Buttigieg looks around at Farmers Market in South Bend, Ind., Thursday, Jan. 10, 2019.
Pete Buttigieg looks around at Farmers Market in South Bend, Ind., Thursday, Jan. 10, 2019.
Sound Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg wants to make sure no part of the country is left behind in the transition to clean energy.
Nam Y. Huh/AP
Umair Irfan
Umair Irfan was a correspondent at Vox writing about climate change, energy policy, and science. He is a regular contributor to the radio program Science Friday. Prior to Vox, he was a reporter for ClimateWire at E&E News.

The youngest Democratic contender for president, South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg, will be 68 years old in 2050. That’s younger than fellow hopefuls Sen. Bernie Sanders, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, and former Vice President Joe Biden are right now.

So the urgency embedded in his new plan to combat climate change released Wednesday is fitting. “We’re running out of time. Experts tell us that we have 10 years to get on the right path, or global warming will reach catastrophic levels by 2050,” he wrote. “But the timeline that compels us to act isn’t set by Congress — it’s being dictated by science.”

Though his proposal has a more modest government outlay than the plans proffered by some of the other 2020 contenders, Buttigieg sets some aggressive benchmarks: doubling clean electricity in the US by 2025, zero emissions in electricity generation by 2035, net-zero emissions from industrial vehicles by 2040, and a net-zero emissions by 2050 (when he’s 68).

Drawing on his experience as a mayor, Buttigieg’s strategy also includes a special focus on supporting towns and cities like South Bend in the clean energy transition. Every part of the country, he argues, deserves the chance to participate, whether that’s through energy efficiency upgrades, job training for displaced workers, or resiliency against extreme weather. “It means tapping into the potential of rural communities to become part of the solution,” Buttigieg wrote.

The plan also raises a variety of economic tools to accelerate the shift toward a low-carbon future, like climate action bonds, creating a clean energy bank, and ending subsidies for fossil fuels. It also calls for US diplomatic and financial leverage on the global stage to push other countries to move aggressively to curb their emissions.

Though the field of Democratic contenders has begun to narrow, there are still 10 candidates who have qualified for the next official debate. And among those remaining, most have also put out comprehensive visions to address climate change. So while it’s become increasingly difficult to stand apart from the field, failing to put forward a climate change proposal at this point would have been a conspicuous omission.

Buttigieg will get a chance to make his case at CNN climate change town hall event on Wednesday.

Buttigieg’s plan creates new financial tools to fight climate change

The word “trillion” doesn’t appear anywhere in Buttigieg’s plan, but his campaign told Vox it estimates the government will spend $1.5 trillion to $2 trillion for the proposal, in addition to investments in modernizing, roads, railways, water mains, and bridges. That’s relatively modest compared to plans from candidates like former Rep. Beto O’Rourke ($5 trillion) or Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders ($16.3 trillion).

But for the price, Buttigieg expects the plan to create 3 million new clean energy jobs. He expects that money to motivate non-federal and private funding mechanisms as well.

In addition, he proposes a variety of financial instruments to drive the transition toward cleaner energy, including:

  • Carbon price and rebate scheme: Money generated by an economy-wide price on carbon would be distributed back to low- and middle-income Americans.
  • Climate risk disclosure: Publicly listed companies would have to disclose their exposure to the physical impacts of climate change and explain to investors how they plan to address them.
  • CarbonStar program: Like the Environmental Protection Agency’s Energy Star program, CarbonStar would tell buyers about the carbon footprint of their products like your car or the electricity powering your home, offering rebates for more efficient options.
  • Extend tax credits for carbon capture: Building on the 45Q tax credit for carbon capture proposal, Buttigieg aims to scale it up to the point that the US can deploy at least one gigaton of annual CO2 removal capacity by 2040.
  • Clean Energy Bank: A $250 billion bank created to finance efficiency, clean energy, and clear water, and resilience projects across the United States.

Climate change will impact every part of the country, and Buttigieg wants to make sure no one is left behind

Buttigieg’s climate change proposal also includes a number of ways to ensure that it’s not just the rich and more heavily populated parts of the country that get funding to protect themselves from climate-related disasters:

  • Equitable disaster relief: This means faster and easier access to federal disaster funds, but also ensuring that the money is protected from political wrangling so that money goes where it’s needed and not to who has better traction in Congress.
  • National catastrophic extreme weather insurance: Create a national insurance program to protect from devastation worsened by climate change, but also other disasters like earthquakes.
  • Climate-smart agriculture: Develop farming methods that not only reduce greenhouse gas emissions from food production and resist extreme weather, but actually use crops and soil management techniques to encourage absorption of carbon.
  • Regional Resilience Hubs: Create centers throughout the country managed by local communities that develop strategies to deal with the specific climate risks in the region, funded in part by $5 billion in annual grants.

The proposal also calls for strengthening worker protections via unions and job retraining with a $200 billion transition fund for workers such as coal miners who would soon find themselves out of work. This may be one of the most critical planks in the plan for building a coalition of support.

While unions are an important constituency for Democrats, some have been skeptical of proposals to radically reshape the energy sector like the Green New Deal. Buttigieg says he supports the Green New Deal, but a major test of his approach to it will be whether he can bring coal, oil, and gas workers on board.

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