In the last few weeks, progressives in both chambers of Congress have begun to get nervous about whether a potential bipartisan deal would slash planned investments in mitigating climate change. There have been talks of these members withholding their votes from any deal that doesn’t deliver on climate action, especially with memories of the failure to do so back in 2009.
Meanwhile, Agence France-Presse recently obtained a draft of a new report from the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, or IPCC, and, as you might guess, the news was not good.
“Life on Earth can recover from a drastic climate shift by evolving into new species and creating new ecosystems,” the draft report reads, according to AFP. “Humans cannot.”
Highlights of a landmark Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) draft report on the effects of a warming planet on people #AFPgraphics pic.twitter.com/AoZOE6Tz1c
— AFP News Agency (@AFP) June 23, 2021
That’s a pair of sentences that are both true and terrifying. The IPCC isn’t telling us something we don’t already know, though they’re doing so with unprecedented clarity into how devastating the effects will be. Anthropogenic climate change is real and happening all around us, steadily creeping toward a tipping point where society as we know it can no longer sustain itself.
It’s easy to think of that point in time as “the end of the world” — I definitely have. But as author John Green wrote in his recent book “The Anthropocene Reviewed”: “[O]ur departure from Earth will very probably not be the end of the world, nor will it be the end of life in the world. Humans are a threat to our own species and many others, but the planet will survive us.” The IPCC seems to agree with Green’s framing.
Which brings me back to Washington, where the debate about infrastructure spending, which I most recently wrote about last week, is still ongoing.
“How do you go forward right now in this moment in history and not address the terrible climate crisis that we face and transform our energy system?” Senate Budget Committee Chair Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., asked on CBS’ “Meet the Press” this week. But there’s no guarantee that those full provisions make it into any bipartisan package or any follow-up bill that Democrats may or may not have planned.








