Tag: effort

  • Biden’s risky effort to take on coal

    Biden’s risky effort to take on coal

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    Climate advocates say the gains from Biden’s gambit could be as big as the risks. The electric power sector is the nation’s second-largest source of greenhouse gases, so cleaning it up is essential to meeting Biden’s goal of having U.S. carbon pollution reach net zero by 2050. Environmentalists hope EPA will go bold by targeting not just coal, the dirtiest fuel in the power mix, but also natural gas — the reigning champ in the U.S. energy economy.

    The EPA and the White House have declined to confirm any details about the rule, which is still undergoing review and could be released as early as next week.

    “[W]e have been clear from the start that we will use all of our legally-upheld tools, grounded in decades-old bipartisan laws, to address dangerous air pollution and protect the air our children breathe today and for generations to come,” EPA said in a statement.

    ‘Considerable risk here’

    The Biden administration is already trying to take on the nation’s No. 1 carbon source — transportation — with an EPA auto-pollution rule released just two weeks ago that’s designed to spur a huge increase in sales of electric cars and trucks.

    That rule is also at risk of political and legal attacks from Republicans, who accuse the president of endangering the economy by pushing green technologies before they’re ready.

    But electric vehicles are already traveling the highways. In contrast, carbon-capturing technology is not yet in place in any active commercial power plant in the U.S., and industry groups argue it’s not ready for wide deployment.

    That could make the EPA proposal especially vulnerable in the courts, because the Clean Air Act requires the agency to show that the technologies it proposes are “adequately demonstrated” — not something that might work in the future.

    “I think there’s considerable risk here,” said Justin Schwab, founder of the firm CGCN Law and a former EPA deputy general counsel during the Trump administration.

    EPA’s rule is expected to set emissions limits for power plants that would in some fashion rely on achieving reductions in line with what carbon capture could achieve, according to people familiar with the proposal. States would then craft compliance plans and could choose other methods that achieve the same reductions, although what those options are remain unclear. The people were granted anonymity to discuss the proposal because the draft rule is not final.

    The rule could also require operators of natural-gas-fired plants to reduce their carbon pollution by adding hydrogen to their fuel mix.

    “Carbon capture and hydrogen are simply not well established technologies in the way that historical, traditional pollution control technologies have been when they’ve been adopted by EPA on a broad scale,” Schwab said.

    Utilities and fossil fuel advocates have long argued that carbon capture and hydrogen could be important technologies for reducing sector emissions — but not for some time, even with recent unprecedented federal investments and incentives.

    Climate advocates say the industry needs to put up or shut up.

    “The fossil fuel industry says this [technology] is how they stay competitive in a carbon-constrained world. Well, we’re in that carbon-constrained world now,” said Jim Murphy, director of legal advocacy for the National Wildlife Federation. “I think it’s time for the fossil fuel industry to put their money where their mouth is.”

    Tom Pyle, president of the pro-fossil fuel American Energy Alliance, accused the administration of issuing an overly aggressive rule that could compel utilities to shutter their coal plants as a political message to environmentalists ahead of Biden’s reelection.

    “I think that the end goal is, they’re really just trying to game the system for renewables,” Pyle said.

    A 2024 message for both parties

    Republicans are eager to tie the upcoming rule and every other Biden climate and energy policy to one of their major themes — the inflation that’s irking Americans and weighing down the president’s approval ratings.

    Rules limiting fossil fuels would also align with the GOP’s narrative that Biden is out to shut down traditional home-grown energy, messages they’ve also sounded on gas stoves, oil drilling and cars.

    Even if courts nix the upcoming EPA rules, their mere existence could prod utilities to shutter existing natural gas power plants depending on how the agency designs the regulations, said Todd Snitchler, president of the Electric Power Supply Association, a trade group that represents power generators. That would probably feed into Republicans’ broader criticisms of the Biden administration, he said.

    “If we are in effect turning off natural gas,” Snitchler said, “I think they’re likely to lean into this to say the administration is raising your prices and jeopardizing power reliability.”

    And after delaying action to await the Supreme Court’s ruling last summer, the EPA also has little time to defend the rules in court should Biden lose his reelection bid.

    “These things are about the campaign,” said Republican energy lobbyist Mike McKenna. “That’s why they waited until year three.”

    But going small would also carry risks by causing the U.S. to miss its climate goals, and it would turn off supporters Biden needs in 2024.

    “The whole Biden coalition is built around this commitment” on climate change, said Dallas Burtraw, a senior fellow with the think tank Resources for the Future. He noted that the administration got Congress to pass a climate law last year that offers big incentives for clean power as well as hydrogen and carbon capture.

    While the climate effort may drive enthusiasm among Biden’s green supporters, Senate Democrats’ hopes of keeping their slim majority depend on defending their turf in moderate states. Some, such as West Virginia, Michigan, Montana and Ohio, are home to big workforces in the automobile, coal and natural gas sectors.

    Biden found a balance in the 2020 campaign, winning the blue-collar-heavy swing states of Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin while promising to eliminate carbon pollution from the power grid by 2035. At the time, he said carbon capture and hydrogen technology could give a lifeline to power industry workers. Few of Biden’s Democratic primary rivals shared that vision.

    “The public fully understands that fossil fuels are creating pollution that is harming communities across the country,” said Matthew Davis, senior director of government affairs with the League of Conservation Voters, addressing questions about the upcoming EPA rules. “There is also a need to emphasize how important it is that we transition in a way that helps workers that are in those sectors.”

    Some energy experts say electricity generation doesn’t offer Republicans the same potent weapon that Biden’s other green energy moves do.

    “It doesn’t hit home to a driver or a homeowner as much as a gas stove or an electric car does,” said Frank Maisano, who represents energy clients at the law firm Bracewell. “I suspect most people don’t know they’re already getting a lot of renewable power because the sector has transitioned much faster than expected.”

    But will it work?

    For utilities, forthcoming investments and incentives from the federal government mean carbon capture could one day be an effective way to reduce power plants’ impact on warming the planet.

    But the big question is whether it can do that now.

    Only two commercial-scale coal-fired power plants in North America have installed carbon capture technologies: Petra Nova in Texas and Boundary Dam in Saskatchewan, Canada. Both projects experienced cost overruns and performance issues that caused them to miss their targets, and Petra Nova shut down after a few years in operation.

    That means the technology flunks the Clean Air Act’s “adequately demonstrated” test, Bracewell attorney Scott Segal argued.

    On the other hand, EPA has previously set standards that require industries to invest in new types of pollution controls, said Dena Adler, an attorney with New York University’s Institute for Policy Integrity.

    “The history of the Clean Air Act is filled with regulations where technologies were projected to be very expensive,” she said. “And after the regulations came down, industry figured out how to install these control technologies better and cheaper.”

    But installing the technology isn’t the only hurdle. Requiring large amounts of carbon capture will also raise questions about what to do with all the CO2.

    Oil producers can use carbon dioxide in “enhanced oil recovery” wells in which CO2 is pumped underground to push out difficult-to-reach oil — although those are mostly clustered in Texas, California and a few other states. It can also be pumped underground into geological formations.

    Either option would probably require many new pipelines to be built to carry the gas to its destination — at a time when permitting is taking longer and the public increasingly opposes them.

    Running carbon capture technologies also requires a significant amount of power, as much as 20 percent of a plant’s electricity output, the Congressional Research Service said last fall. Petra Nova powered its carbon capture equipment by building a 75-megawatt natural gas unit onsite, the emissions from which dampened the carbon reductions achieved by the coal-fired unit.

    “If EPA wants its rule to survive, it needs a substantial basis in the record that its assumptions about the feasibility of the adoption of this technology have a real basis and that it’s not just pie in the sky,” said Schwab.

    Similarly knotty questions surround the possibility of utilities burning hydrogen alongside natural gas — another promising but unproven technology that they could use to comply with the upcoming rule.

    SCOTUS’ shadow hangs over the rule

    The courts may have the final say on EPA’s rule — as they did in knocking down both Obama’s power plant regulation and the Trump administration’s attempt to replace it.

    The Supreme Court last summer split along ideological lines in striking down the Obama-era Clean Power Plan — while embracing a legal doctrine that forbids agencies from deciding “major questions” that legally rest with Congress. That doctrine doomed the Obama rule, which had pushed for a broad shift by utilities away from coal.

    Biden’s foes could argue that his rule similarly runs afoul of the same legal standard if it effectively prompts utilities to shutter their coal plants.

    But some legal experts see a bright spot for Biden in last year’s EPA ruling.

    For one thing, NYU’s Adler said, an EPA standard based on carbon capture would be “entirely different” from the Obama regulation’s demand that utilities switch to cleaner fuel sources. Capturing pollution at the source “is really the bread and butter of the Clean Air Act and the type of regulation that EPA has been issuing for decades,” she said.

    In addition, while Congress hasn’t explicitly changed EPA’s regulatory authority, Democrats have passed major investments as part of the 2021 bipartisan infrastructure law and the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act. Those laws provided billions of dollars in research grants for carbon capture and hydrogen, plus expanded tax credits to encourage adoption of those technologies.

    But EPA can’t rely on those federal dollars to justify a more stringent regulation, said Schwab, the Trump-era agency veteran. He said it’s not clear the Clean Air Act even allows EPA to consider the availability of the money, and much of the funding may never materialize if a future Congress and administration undo the Biden-era laws
    It’s unlikely that all of Biden’s many climate rules will survive Supreme Court scrutiny, environmental and energy lawyer Michael Buschbacher said in an email this week to POLITICO’s E&E News.

    “The Biden administration appears to just want something to stick, essentially scaring industry into self-regulating,” wrote Buschbacher, a partner at Boyden Gray & Associates. He added, “This approach could backfire spectacularly.”

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    #Bidens #risky #effort #coal
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Top Dem super PAC starts Biden ad blitz, pledges $75 million campaign effort

    Top Dem super PAC starts Biden ad blitz, pledges $75 million campaign effort

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    The president’s long-awaited announcement on Tuesday allows Biden to begin fundraising for what will be an expensive campaign. But his April launch also gave the green light for Democratic groups like Priorities USA to jumpstart 2024 efforts backing the president.

    “It is essential to remind voters of what’s at stake in 2024, and to do so online. Issues such as abortion access, protecting our climate, curbing gun control, making health care more affordable and making our economy work for every American will be the centerpieces of this campaign,” said Danielle Butterfield, the group’s executive director.

    Founded in 2011, Priorities USA is among the Democratic Party’s largest political action committees. But it won’t be the only one supporting Biden, or the main one for that. Future Forward, which already has been running TV ads, will likely be Biden’s primary outside spending apparatus, though American Bridge and others are also expected to have a share in the campaign’s portfolio.

    There was also some uncertainty about the role Biden-allied Building Back Together might play after the 2022 election. But instead of paid media campaigns, BBT will focus on coordinating among Democratic groups to highlight the Biden administration’s efforts to implement the president’s agenda.

    Priorities’ ad, titled “Our Strength, Our Champion,” focuses on the Biden administration’s accomplishments and echoes the tone of Biden’s announcement video — with imagery of Jan. 6 and Biden’s leading GOP opponent, former President Donald Trump. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, another expected 2024 GOP candidate, make appearances as well. The ad will stream in English and Spanish.

    The ad then runs through a list of Biden’s accomplishments, noting that he has “worked across the aisle,” “protected marriage equality,” “took historic climate action,” and “lowered health care costs.”

    In the final seconds of the video, with Biden’s voice playing in the background, “Joe Biden is fighting with us. Let’s finish the job together” flashed across the screen.

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    #Top #Dem #super #PAC #starts #Biden #blitz #pledges #million #campaign #effort
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • IPL 2023: DC, SRH eye collective batting effort

    IPL 2023: DC, SRH eye collective batting effort

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    Hyderabad: Their first win secured, Delhi Capitals would expect more from their batters when they take on a stuttering Sunrisers Hyderabad, who will be eager to return to winning ways, in the IPL here on Monday.

    The Capitals have had a tough season so far. They have struggled in all departments and, as a result, lost five games on the trot.

    However, David Warner and his troops finally managed to eke out their maiden victory as they scrapped their way to a four-wicket win over Kolkata Knight Riders on Thursday.

    MS Education Academy

    The bowling unit got its act together and put up a stellar display to restrict KKR to 127 but the Delhi batters, barring skipper Warner and deputy Axar Patel, failed once again as the hosts huffed and puffed to the win.

    Much was expected of Prithvi Shaw and Mitchell Marsh but the two have been huge letdowns so far this season.

    Scores of 12, 7, 0, 15, 0 and 13, in the six outings have highlighted Shaw’s inability to tackle pace and spin, and a quick-fix is unlikely.

    Australian all-rounder Marsh has also had a woeful run with the bat, that includes two ducks in the four games and a high score of four. He hasn’t fared well with the ball either, and it is to be seen if the management persists with him or the likes of Rovman Powell and Rilee Rossouw are given another chance.

    With the young Indian batters struggling, the onus is also on Manish Pandey, a seasoned campaigner, to bat more responsibly in the middle so that Axar has the freedom to play the big shots towards the end.

    While the Capitals have a lot of work to do, there are a few positives they can build upon.

    Playing his first game of the season, veteran Ishant Sharma bowled a brilliant spell, turning back time. He bowled with accuracy and produced inward movement to fashion the team’s first win.

    Ishant was complemented well by the rest of the Delhi bowlers, who had been underwhelming so far.

    Under the scanner for his below-par strike rate, skipper Warner also looked at his fluent best against KKR. He will hope to continue in similar vein against his former team, come Monday.

    Sunrisers Hyderabad have slumped to back-to-back defeats after it seemed their campaign had taken off. They currently occupy the penultimate spot on the table with four points from six games.

    The Orange Army has looked good on paper but their batting has failed them. Their batters have neither been able to chase nor put up a good total in the previous two games they lost.

    With plenty of match winners in the side, they would hope to get their campaign back on track.

    Squads (from):

    Delhi Capitals: David Warner (c), Prithvi Shaw, Sarfaraz Khan, Aman Hakim Khan, Abhishek Porel (wk), Axar Patel, Khaleel Ahmed, Kuldeep Yadav, Rovman Powell, Rilee Rossouw, Anrich Nortje, Mustafizur Rahaman, Chetan Sakariya, Mukesh Kumar, Phil Salt, Lungi Ngidi, Praveen Dubey, Lalit Yadav, Ripal Patel, Vicky Ostwal, Ishant Sharma, Manish Pandey, Kamlesh Nagarkoti and Yash Dhull.

    Sunrisers Hyderabad: Aiden Markram (c), Abdul Samad, Rahul Tripathi, Glenn Phillips, Abhishek Sharma, Marco Jansen, Washington Sundar, Fazalhaq Farooqi, Kartik Tyagi, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, T Natarajan, Umran Malik, Harry Brook, Mayank Agarwal, Heinrich Klaasen, Adil Rashid, Mayank Markande, Vivrant Sharma, Samarth Vyas, Sanvir Singh, Upendra Yadav, Mayank Dagar, Nitish Kumar Reddy, Akeal Hosein, Anmolpreet Singh.

    Match starts: 7:30pm IST.

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    #IPL #SRH #eye #collective #batting #effort

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Collective Effort Needed To Curb Drug Menace: Altaf Bukhari

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    SRINAGAR: Apni Party President Syed Mohammad Altaf Bukhari on Thursday called on people from all walks of life to unite against the ongoing drug menace in the Kashmir and protect the young populationfrom falling prey to this grave evil. He emphasised that society can no longer afford to lose youngsters to drugs and urged everyone to play his/ her role in eradicating the menace.

    While talking to reporters on the sidelines of an event, Syed Mohammad Altaf Bukhari said, “Apni Party has decided to take a range of initiatives, including skill development training for the youth, with the aim of empowering the youngsters and protecting them from the ongoing drug abuse in J&K.”

    He said, “We are not taking these initiatives for political benefits or electoral gains; rather, this is a sincere effort to shoulder our responsibility towards society. Given the severity of the drug menace and its impact on society, I think every one of us ought to play his/her role in eradicating this destructive evil.”

    Apni Party President made a promise that he would extend his assistance in rehabilitating the drug victims. He said that if anyone approaches him seeking help for the rehabilitation of an addict, he will provide support while ensuring the victim’s identity remains confidential.

    Bukhari urged the administration to take serious measures to nab each and every person who is responsible for the smuggling and sale of drugs in society.

    He said these criminals are playing with the lives of people, and they must face severe punishment.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Inside Chicago’s intense, behind-the-scenes effort to secure the DNC

    Inside Chicago’s intense, behind-the-scenes effort to secure the DNC

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    Another official noted a letter sent by labor leaders from New York that implored Biden to choose a labor town, owing to his emotional ties and political connections to the union movement.

    Chicago labor leaders sent a letter of their own. The larger Chicago team felt increasingly confident about its chances through last week. But they knew it was a done deal when Biden and Gov. JB Pritzker spoke early Tuesday, when the Illinois Democrat played up the president’s love of the country’s iconic cities.

    “Chicago is your kind of town and we’re going to throw a huge party for you,” Pritzker said, according to a person close to the Chicago bid who was granted anonymity to discuss the conversation candidly.

    Biden gave him the news on the call, after which the Democratic National Committee put out an announcement saying the city would host delegates and convention-goers Aug. 19-22, 2024.

    The announcement was a coup for Pritzker and Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), who is vice chair of the Democratic National Committee and early on nudged Chicago Democrats to try for the convention. But it also revealed some of the thinking inside 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., where Biden is eyeing both reelection and a memorable convention after having had to skip the festivities in Milwaukee during the pandemic in 2020.

    Biden had struggled with deciding which of the three cities to pick, even quipping to confidants at one point about why Democrats couldn’t simply hold the confab in Philadelphia, according to a person familiar with the exchange. Philadelphia had not actually applied to host the convention, though it did enjoy one strategic advantage over the other cities: a proximity to Biden’s cherished Delaware.

    Privately, Biden thought of Atlanta as a smart strategic choice, noting that it was a swing state that could propel him to another term if he ran again. He had already moved Georgia up in the Democratic primary calendar.

    But his views were at odds with those in the party who convinced his team, which conceded that Atlanta simply didn’t make sense logistically. Though the city is increasingly powering Democrats to victory in some key races, it is still nestled in a conservative Southern state, with a six-week abortion ban in place.

    Georgia is also a right-to-work state and has few unionized hotels compared with Chicago. Another party official noted it would be easier for Biden and the convention committee to work with Pritzker compared with Georgia’s Republican governor, Brian Kemp, who is increasingly eyeing a national profile (Democrats had been working more with Atlanta’s mayor, rather than with Kemp).

    Still, Illinois and Chicago elected officials were fearful that Biden’s sentimentality about Atlanta would win out. And so they and their neighbors made a full-court press of their own. When the DNC came to Chicago to discuss the city’s bid, they happened to be there during Lollapalooza’s kickoff. Mayor Lori Lightfoot took them to watch Metallica warm up in an empty Grant Park.

    Later in the process, Midwestern governors and other elected officials, along with Midwest state Democratic Party chairs and union leaders sent letters to Biden urging him to pick Chicago. They also talked to his team directly, underscoring how critical the Midwest region had been to him in 2020.

    “The Midwest is key to a victory in 2024, and there is no city better positioned to reach those voters than Chicago,” Duckworth said in a statement. She had privately appealed to Biden with this message, too.

    But even those pitches were coated with the type of odes to history that organizers believed were critical for winning Biden over.

    “Chicago is an engine for progress. Chicago proudly represents millions of Democratic voters and is an historic Democratic stronghold. Given Detroit already won the honor of hosting the 2024 NFL Draft, it would be right to share in the victories with a nearly as great Midwestern city,” Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer wrote in her personal letter.

    There was concern, however, about Chicago’s persistent problem with violent crime. Statistics showed it was declining but still higher than pre-pandemic levels, making it an issue in the recent mayor’s race and a concern that it could put Democrats in a hot spot for their handling of it.

    What ended up helping Chicago, according to a person close to the city’s bid, were two recent Democratic wins on the issue of abortion. The first was for a state Supreme Court election in Wisconsin, which will likely help block an 1840s abortion ban on the books. The second was Whitmer repealing the state’s 1931 abortion ban. Each affirmed that progressive politics continues to have a strong foothold in the Midwest.

    “It was the Blue Wall,” the person said.

    Money mattered, too. Pritzker, who has been integral in pushing for Chicago, assured that the DNC would not go into debt holding a Chicago convention, which was a problem in 2012 when the convention in Charlotte, N.C., ended up millions in the red.

    The Illinois governor, who self-financed his past two elections, enlisted his sister, former Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker, businessman Michael Sacks, Cubs co-owner Laura Ricketts and Illinois AFL-CIO President Tim Drea to help fund Chicago’s effort. Jerry Reinsdorf and Rocky Wirtz, who head the Chicago Bulls and Chicago Blackhawks, respectively, also were part of Chicago’s pitch to the DNC. Both teams play at the United Center, where the convention will be held. It’s the same location as the 1996 Democratic Convention.

    “We are ready for a repeat performance,” they said in a joint statement.

    Still, as the time approached for Biden to make a decision, he and other party officials were holding out for one last domino to fall: the Chicago mayor’s race on April 4. Those close to Biden say there was some internal hand-wringing about hosting the convention if mayoral candidate Paul Vallas, who had previous ties to Republicans and had been publicly critical of prominent Democrats, won. It wouldn’t have been a deal-breaker, according to a person involved in the talks, but it could have been a complicating factor.

    When Brandon Johnson emerged with a clear victory in an April 4 runoff election, it further cemented the city’s reputation as a union town (Johnson is a former organizer with the Chicago Teachers Union) and put Chicago’s DNC bid in the driver’s seat.

    Johnson himself talked directly to Biden in recent days about the convention during a private call in which the president congratulated the new mayor.

    “We pulled out all the stops,” said Lightfoot. “Anybody who had a connection in the White House, in the president’s orbit, we were in their ear saying ‘Chicago, Chicago, Chicago.’”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • G7 vows more effort on renewables but sets no coal phaseout deadline

    G7 vows more effort on renewables but sets no coal phaseout deadline

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    The Group of Seven richest countries set higher 2030 targets for generating renewable energy, amid an energy crisis provoked by Russia’s war on Ukraine, but they set no deadline to phase out coal-fired power plants.

    At a meeting hosted by Japan, ministers from Japan, the U.S., Canada, Italy, France, Germany and the U.K. reaffirmed their commitment to reach zero carbon emissions by the middle of the century, and said they aimed to collectively increase solar power capacity by 1 terawatt and offshore wind by 150 gigawatts by the end of this decade.

    “The G7 contributes to expanding renewable energy globally and bringing down costs by strengthening capacity including through a collective increase in offshore wind capacity … and a collective increase of solar …,” the energy and environment ministers said in a 36-page communiqué issued after the two-day meeting.

    “In the midst of an unprecedented energy crisis, it’s important to come up with measures to tackle climate change and promote energy security at the same time,” Japanese industry minister Yasutoshi Nishimura told a news conference, according to Reuters.

    The ministers’ statement also condemned Russia’s “illegal, unjustifiable, and unprovoked” invasion of Ukraine and its “devastating” impact on the environment. The ministers vowed to support a green recovery and reconstruction in Ukraine.

    They also published a five-point plan for securing access to critical raw materials that will be crucial for the green transition.

    Before the meeting, Japan was facing criticism from green groups over its push to keep the door open to continued investments in natural gas, a fossil fuel. The final agreed text said such investments “can be appropriate” to deal with the crisis if they are consistent with climate objectives.

    The ministers’ meeting in the northern city of Sapporo comes just over a month before a G7 leaders’ summit in Hiroshima.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • Why Tennessee GOP’s effort to oust 3 Dem lawmakers is so unusual

    Why Tennessee GOP’s effort to oust 3 Dem lawmakers is so unusual

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    “It will echo across the country. I think it will have a chilling effect on all states where there’s supermajorities or very red states,” Rep. Gloria Johnson, one of the Democrats under threat of expulsion, said in a phone interview Tuesday. “This is chipping away at our democracy, there’s no question, because everybody’s going to wonder, ‘am I next?’”

    The ACLU in Tennessee also issued a warning the effort “undermines Democracy.”

    “Expulsion is an extreme measure that is used very infrequently in our state and our country because it strips voters of representation by the people they elected,” Kathy Sinback, the executive director of the ACLU in Tennessee, said in a statement.

    State legislatures often go decades without taking such an action against members.

    The dustup began last week, when hundreds of protestors gathered at the capitol in Nashville to urge lawmakers to pass gun safety measures in the aftermath of a shooting at a local school that left three adults and three children dead.

    Amid the protests that leaked into the building, Reps. Gloria Johnson, Justin Jones and Justin Pearson led chants on the House floor in which they called on their colleagues to pass new gun laws. The lawmakers were aided by a bullhorn.

    Their stunt enraged Republicans, who promptly introduced resolutions calling for their removal, sparking further chaos on the House floor.

    Now, Republican leaders — who likened those actions to an “insurrection” — will vote Thursday on whether the members should be allowed to continue serving in the House or be removed from office. The Democrats have already been stripped of their committee assignments.

    Resolutions filed against the three declared that they had participated in “disorderly behavior” and “did knowingly and intentionally bring disorder and dishonor to the House of Representatives.”

    Critics of the move to evict the members argued that Republicans have failed in the past to remove their members of their own party who acted egregiously, such as a former representative who was accused of sexually assaulting teenagers when he was a basketball coach.

    “It’s morally insane that a week after a mass shooting took six lives in our community, House Republicans only response is to expel us for standing with our constituents to call for gun control,” Jones tweeted Tuesday afternoon. “What’s happening in Tennessee is a clear danger to democracy all across this nation.”

    The group of Democrats faces tough odds surviving the vote: Both chambers of the Tennessee legislature are controlled by a Republican supermajority. Special elections will be held if the resolutions pass.

    Johnson, a former teacher who survived a school shooting that left one student dead, said she plans to bring an attorney to Thursday’s vote and “defend herself.”

    “I’m happy to show up and make my case heard, because I will always lift up the voices of the people in my district who want to see gun sense legislation,” Johnson said.



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    #Tennessee #GOPs #effort #oust #Dem #lawmakers #unusual
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Biden won’t veto GOP effort to repeal D.C. crime law

    Biden won’t veto GOP effort to repeal D.C. crime law

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    “I think that’s where most of the caucus is. Most of the caucus sees the mayor in a reasonable position as saying: 95 percent of this is really good, some of this is problematic. And we need to keep working on it,” Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) said after the meeting.

    Biden’s much-anticipated Thursday remarks end several weeks of mystery surrounding his handling of a politically perilous vote for his party. And it comes as the president moves to strengthen the ties with Hill Democrats that propelled him to the party’s nomination.

    The president also told Senate Democrats during their meeting that he wants to see immigration reform on the floor, according to Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) and left several Democratic senators with the distinct impression that he’s running for reelection. In addition, Sen. John Hickenlooper (D-Colo.) said that Biden addressed the debt ceiling by remarking that he’s waiting for Republicans to show him a budget.

    Following their meeting, Schumer also told reporters that the president would support Sens. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) and J.D. Vance’s (R-Ohio) bill on railroad protections following the East Palestine train derailment in their state, along with tackling insulin prices for people under 65. The debt limit and budget, along with an “online protection tech bill for kids,” were also discussed, Schumer said.

    “We had a great meeting,” Schumer said as he exited the meeting with Biden. “We talked about implementing the great accomplishments of the president of the last two years. We believe we can get a lot of good bipartisan stuff done in these two years. We are filled with unity, optimism, and optimism about 2024.”

    But Biden’s most potent comments came on the GOP efforts to unravel the criminal code reform that the D.C. Council passed over Mayor Muriel Bowser’s veto. That citywide legislation would scrap some mandatory minimum sentences and change some criminal penalties. Senators cannot filibuster the rollback as a result of the Home Rule Act, which gives Congress special oversight over local Washington affairs.

    After the meeting, Biden tweeted that he supports D.C. statehood and local autonomy but does not “support some of the changes D.C. Council put forward over the Mayor’s objections — such as lowering penalties for carjackings. If the Senate votes to overturn what D.C. Council did — I’ll sign it.”

    Senate Democrats have squirmed for two-plus weeks over the vote, which Republicans plan to force to the floor as soon as next week and would be the first congressional override of local D.C. affairs since 1991. Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-Ga.) predicted that “there will be substantial bipartisan support for a resolution to reject the proposed changes.”

    Besides the obvious implications of a vote on the potent political issue of crime, some Senate Democrats are plainly uncomfortable with congressional intervention in D.C.’s affairs.

    “I’m disappointed. First of all, I hope the Senate would not pass it. But I think it’s pretty clear they will,” said Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.). “And to me, the Congress should not substitute its judgment for the elected representatives of the people of the District of Columbia.”

    Yet it appears that Democrats’ discomfort with the D.C. law — a near-rewrite of the capital’s criminal code — is carrying more weight than their natural inclination not to interfere.

    “I guess [Biden] thinks it’s too far — a bridge too far, which it really is. I’m glad he said that,” Manchin said leaving the meeting, adding that he clapped loudly when Biden disclosed his view to his fellow Democrats.

    House Republicans first teed up the bill in February, amid a highly public clash between D.C.’s council and its mayor over the sweeping crime bill. In the House, the GOP-led bill won support from 31 Democrats, many of them moderates who have already called for stronger action on nationwide rise in crime since the pandemic. One swing-seat Democrat who backed the bill, Rep. Angie Craig (D-Minn.), voted for it mere hours after she was assaulted in her D.C. apartment building.

    Biden’s move to let Congress stop the criminal code changes in D.C. may aggravate locals, but will be a relief to many congressional Democrats who are weary of GOP attacks on them over progressive urban crime proposals. And it comes as prominent Democrats are talking less about Biden’s age or whether he should run again and more about working together heading into the 2024 election.

    In the meeting on Thursday, Biden’s reelection campaign did not explicitly come up but it was mostly assumed he’s running again: “I didn’t hear negative vibes on that,” said Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.).

    “The pieces are together. He’ll run again. And he’ll get full support from the caucus,” said Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). “It’s a good feel overall.”

    But not everyone is feeling the love. Rep. Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.), an outspoken progressive who’s mostly pro-Biden, said he’s had a couple issues lately with the president. He cited the administration’s new effort to restrict asylum in certain migration cases — “that’s a bad policy,” he said — and then a lack of public follow-through on an environmental justice initiative.

    And this week, Bowman said he was “hurt” by the Biden team’s handling of a Black History Month celebration at the White House, which he said was so crowded that several of his colleagues left early rather than try to fight for space.

    “They had us packed in the room like sardines,” Bowman said of the White House event, comparing it to better-planned events that span multiple rooms, like the annual Christmas party. “That was, to me, very disrespectful. A slap in the face.”

    For now, though, Bowman’s view is an outlier. And Biden got a warm welcome Wednesday night when he visited a group of House Democrats in Baltimore at their annual policy retreat.

    Reflecting on their much-improved rapport with Biden since last year’s squabbling over his party-line agenda, many Democrats said there was little doubt he would glide to the nomination in 2024.

    “If we, the elected officials, are not with him. I think he’s going to have a very difficult time winning reelection. I gotta tell you, I just don’t see people being against him,” said Rep. Juan Vargas (D-Calif.).

    “I look at everybody else who’s out there. I mean, he’s a little old. That’s true, he’s gotta address that. But other than his age, he’s the best guy we have in my opinion.”

    Jordain Carney contributed to this report.

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    #Biden #wont #veto #GOP #effort #repeal #D.C #crime #law
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Women’s T20 World Cup: It’s a pretty special effort from the group, says Meg Lanning

    Women’s T20 World Cup: It’s a pretty special effort from the group, says Meg Lanning

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    Cape Town: After winning the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup for a record sixth time, Australia captain Meg Lanning acknowledged her side for putting in a ‘pretty special effort’, which saw them go undefeated throughout the tournament, including beating South Africa in the final by 19 runs.

    “It’s a pretty special effort from the group. All teams came hard at us – we knew that was going to happen. But we performed well throughout the tournament, so super proud. We felt like it was a good score, but we had to bowl well.”

    “The wicket wasn’t as good as it was in the semi-final. We felt confident if we could hit the right lengths and target the stumps. We had to put pressure on South Africa,” said Meg after the match ended.

    With the title win at Cape Town, Meg also overtook Ricky Ponting for captain with the greatest number of ICC titles. She had previously captained Australia to 2014, 2018 and 2020 T20 World Cup wins and 2022 ODI World Cup title, apart from a gold medal in the 2022 Commonwealth Games.

    “We knew it would be an amazing atmosphere, which it was. It was a great event. It was about keeping things simple when the pressure is on, and getting things done. Nice to finish off with a win with this group. It’s a special group. Not just the players, but also the support staff that put in a lot of work behind the scenes, and allow us to go out and play our cricket,” she added.

    The 2023 Women’s T20 World Cup victory came after Meg returned to the sport after a five-month break. Co-incidentally, the victory at Cape Town was Meg’s 100th T20I as captain of Australia. Beth Mooney, Player of the Match in the final with a breezy 74, was thrilled to have Meg, also her coffee and game-day breakfast buddy, back to playing the sport.

    “When Meg retires – hopefully not for a few more years, hope you’re listening Meg – she’ll go down as one of the greatest leaders, not just in cricket but in sport and just generally as well. She’s got an immense cricket brain.”

    “She’s cool, calm and collected under pressure and she’s got empathy as well, she understands how people feel in certain situations because she’s been there before and she’s experienced a lot as a person and as a leader and as a cricketer. Absolutely she’ll go down as one of the greatest ever for our team and we’re very lucky to have her.”

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    #Womens #T20 #World #Cup #pretty #special #effort #group #Meg #Lanning

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Balloon was part of wider Chinese snooping effort, Pentagon says

    Balloon was part of wider Chinese snooping effort, Pentagon says

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    image

    “We are aware that there have been four previous balloons that have gone over U.S. territory. This is what we assess is part of a larger Chinese surveillance balloon program,” Ryder said. “You’ve heard us talk in the past about the fact that this is a program that’s been operated for several years.”

    Last week, the military tracked a balloon that crossed the U.S. before it was shot down off the coast of the Carolinas on Saturday. The military is still working to recover debris from the airship.

    Outrage over Beijing’s encroachment last week was further fueled by revelations of several more Chinese balloons that crossed into U.S. territory but went undetected. Ryder said the military has since “learned a lot on how to track” the balloons.

    Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who postponed a visit to Beijing over the balloon, echoed the assessment that China’s surveillance was widespread. He said the U.S. has “shared information with dozens of countries.”

    “We’re not alone in this,” Blinken told reporters on Wednesday. “Countries across five continents have also had surveillance balloons [fly over] their territory, which is why we’re sharing this information with others.”

    “We continue to look to China to act responsibly,” he said.

    The global surveillance network was first reported by The Washington Post.

    There’s bipartisan furor over China’s incursion, but Biden is also taking heat, mostly from Republicans, over waiting to shoot down the balloon.

    Biden said he ordered the craft shot down last week, but military brass advised waiting until it was over water to minimize risks to people on the ground.

    Meanwhile, officials from the intelligence community, Pentagon and State Department are set to brief members of the House and Senate separately on Thursday.

    Administration briefers include Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman, Pentagon policy chief Colin Kahl and Gen. Glen VanHerck, the commander of U.S. Northern Command and the North American Aerospace Defense Command.

    Sen. Jon Tester, a Democrat, will also gavel in the first public hearing on the balloon on Thursday with Pentagon officials set to testify.

    Tester, whose state of Montana was traversed by the balloon, chairs the Senate panel that controls the Pentagon budget.

    Sherman and the Pentagon’s Asia policy chief, Ely Ratner, are also scheduled to testify at a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on U.S.-China policy on Thursday.

    Daniella Diaz and Kelly Garrity contributed to this report.

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    #Balloon #part #wider #Chinese #snooping #effort #Pentagon
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )