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Supply Chain Risk

Republicans Threaten EPA Authority at Supreme Court While U.N. Scientists Warn of Dire Costs of Climate Inaction

U.N. report finds nations not acting fast
enough to protect populations from current and future climate threats, as the
Supreme Court takes up case that threatens the EPA’s authority to regulate
pollution

 

Boston
(February 28, 2022) – Senator Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.), Chairman of the
Environment and Public Works Subcommittee on Clean Air, Climate, and Nuclear
Safety, released the following statement in response to the United Nations’
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Working Group II contribution
to the Sixth Assessment Report, entitled “Climate Change 2022: Impacts,
Adaptation and Vulnerability. This report highlights the ways the climate
crisis is already causing irreversible damage, including leaving as many as 3.6
billion people worldwide highly vulnerable to climate impacts. However, the
report also finds that the global response to the climate crisis is uneven,
insufficient, and at risk of worsening inequalities.

 

“One
day before we gather to hear the State of the Union address, our preeminent
international body of climate scientists has delivered a devastating report on
the state of our planet. Climate change—caused by the ongoing and historic use
of fossil fuels—has led to worldwide suffering, displacement, and death.
Storms, floods, heat waves, droughts, wildfires have been supercharged by
climate change and are out of control, and incremental efforts won’t be enough
to keep people safe today or in the future. We need a transformation that
centers the communities most at risk and supports our workers, we need an
economy powered by clean energy, and we need investment at the scale and
urgency demanded by this unrelenting crisis. We can deliver on all counts with
a Green New Deal.

 

“The
documented life-threatening effects of the climate crisis and greenhouse gas
emissions have never been clearer. But today, the Supreme Court heard arguments
that are attempting to limit the Environmental Protection Agency’s statutory
authority to regulate dangerous climate pollution. The stakes could not be
higher: we must protect our communities and our climate, and we cannot allow a
stolen court to steal our future.”

 

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