Extreme Temperature Diary- Thursday November 25th, 2021/Main Topic: What Can Climate Folks Be Thankful for During 2021?

The main purpose of this ongoing blog will be to track planetary extreme or record temperatures related to climate change. Any reports I see of ETs will be listed below the main topic of the day. I’ll refer to extreme or record temperatures as ETs (not extraterrestrials).😉

Main Topic: What Can Climate Folks Be Thankful for During 2021?

Dear Diary. Happy Thanksgiving everyone. What can yours truly and my climate friends be thankful for on this Thanksgiving? It doesn’t seem like much since progress is slow, but compared with Thanksgiving 2020, or just one year ago, plenty. I’m praying that progress won’t be so slow that our climate and civilization can’t be saved.

One year ago, Trump was still in office, so we were not officially part of the Paris Accords. Despite getting Biden elected earlier in the month, during Thanksgiving 2020 we were uncertain of regaining the U.S. Senate. We checked off that box on January 5th, 2021 with the election of my home state of Georgia Senators Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock. This year some allotment of climate money was approved through the first bipartisan bill on infrastructure. The much-ballyhooed Build Back Better bill, or second infrastructure bill with some Green New Deal initiatives, would have no chance of passage without Georgia’s election going our way.

Despite a contentious and disappointing COP26, some progress was made. During 2021 the demand for change to renewables became stronger with solar and wind farms growing. Battery technology has also gotten better. The demand for all electric vehicles has also grown, especially in Britain and Europe. Also on other fronts, don’t forget that a year ago there were no COVID19 vaccines, although their implementation was on the horizon. The world appears to be much better off this Thanksgiving despite some increased economic hardships stemming from adjusting to COVID19 and its aftermath.

This Thanksgiving holiday, let’s look at more slow progress. Here is some as noted by my friend Bob Henson:

Here is that CNN piece:

https://www.cnn.com/2021/11/24/politics/white-house-new-climate-division/index.html

White House creates new climate-focused division within Office of Science and Technology Policy

By Ella Nilsen and Kate Sullivan, CNN

Updated 12:55 PM ET, Wed November 24, 2021

The creation of a new climate-focused division in the Office of Science and Technology Policy underscores the Biden administration's commitment to tackling the global climate crisis.

The creation of a new climate-focused division in the Office of Science and Technology Policy underscores the Biden administration’s commitment to tackling the global climate crisis.

(CNN)The White House announced Wednesday it has created a new climate-focused division within its Office of Science and Technology Policy and tapped Stanford professor Sally Benson to lead it.

Benson will serve as deputy director for energy and chief strategist for the energy transition at OSTP, the White House said in a news release. Costa Samaras, an engineer and policy analyst formerly at Carnegie Mellon University, will serve as principal assistant director for energy and chief adviser for energy policy.

The OSTP Energy Division “will develop national clean energy innovation plans to ensure America’s continued leadership in clean energy innovation and ensure the United States gets to net-zero emissions by 2050,” the White House said.

Benson and Samaras will work with Biden administration science and climate advisers, including White House national climate adviser Gina McCarthy and OSTP deputy director for climate and environment Jane Lubchenco.

The Washington Post first reported the announcement.

How Biden's infrastructure funding could push more Americans into the electric vehicle 'revolution'

How Biden’s infrastructure funding could push more Americans into the electric vehicle ‘revolution’

“Dr. Benson and Dr. Samaras are leading experts in the energy field who will help us realize an emission-free future where clean electricity is the cheapest and most reliable electricity, where clean fuels are the cheapest fuels, and where we enable equitable access to clean energy services to everyone across the country,” the President’s science adviser and OSTP director Eric Lander said in a statement.

Lander continued: “Their leadership of OSTP’s new Energy Division will be a critical asset as America works to lead the way to a prosperous, net-zero carbon economy by 2050.”

Benson has been at Stanford University since 2007 and is co-director of the Stanford Center for Carbon Storage and the Stanford Carbon Removal Initiative. She studies “technologies and pathways to reducing greenhouse gas emissions including geologic storage of CO2 in deep underground formations and energy systems analysis for a low-carbon future,” according to Stanford University.

The creation of the new division underscores the Biden administration’s commitment to tackling the global climate crisis. The President has said he wants the United States to lead the world in the fight against the climate crisis and has committed the United States to reducing its greenhouse gas emissions by 50%-52% below its 2005 emissions levels by 2030.

The single largest piece of Biden’s massive economic spending bill — the centerpiece of his domestic agenda — focuses on climate. The bill, which was passed by the House of Representatives but could undergo more changes in the Senate, would deliver nearly $570 billion in tax credits and investments aimed at combating climate change. The bill was majorly pared down from Biden’s initial proposal but delivers key wins for the administration on climate.

In addition, the new infrastructure law that Biden recently signed allocates about $50 billion for climate resilience, which includes replacing roads to withstand extreme rainfall, treating forests to prevent wildfires and shoring up reservoirs that sank to new lows this year amid incredible drought.

Special presidential envoy for climate John Kerry recently laid out the Biden administration’s four main climate goals at a major summit in Glasgow: raising global ambition on containing a rise in temperatures; getting countries to commit to taking action this decade; driving ahead on finance and adaptation efforts to vulnerable communities; and completing negotiations on implementation guidelines for the Paris Climate accord.

Kerry, who was then-President Barack Obama’s secretary of state and has long worked on climate issues, is a Cabinet-level official in Biden’s administration and sits on the National Security Council.

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I’m praying that we will have much more to be thankful for by Thanksgiving 2022. The most important things to want are the passage of Build Back Better and a favorable result from the November 2022 midterm elections. Of course, you can follow my daily news on this site on both these items and many more. Speaking of which:

Here is more climate and weather news from Thursday:

(As usual, this will be a fluid post in which more information gets added during the day as it crosses my radar, crediting all who have put it on-line. Items will be archived on this site for posterity. In most instances click on the pictures of each tweet to see each article. The most noteworthy items will be listed first.)

Now here are some of today’s articles and notes on the horrid COVID-19 pandemic:

(If you like these posts and my work please contribute via the PayPal widget, which has recently been added to this site. Thanks in advance for any support.) 

Guy Walton “The Climate Guy”

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