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Dear Friend, |
The Inflation Reduction Act is now the law of the land. The work doesn’t stop here — these investments are just the beginning. |
The Act’s $369 billion for combating the climate crisis will go a long way to make sure that clean energy remains ascendant, but it’ll still take persistent grassroots activism and legal work to ensure that money is spent correctly. For example, Congress gave the Postal Service $3 billion for electric trucks, but we’ll need to keep our eye on the Postal Service’s leadership to ensure that they truly electrify more trucks than initially planned. |
Other parts of the bill require a different type of activism. The Act mandates the federal government to offer parts of the Gulf of Mexico and Alaska’s Cook Inlet for oil and gas development. There is also a side-deal to move a separate bill in September for so-called “permitting reform” that could weaken core protections under the National Environmental Policy Act, the federal law that gives communities a voice in what happens to the environment around them. These giveaways will make our ongoing work to clean up our air and phase out fossil fuels more difficult, but we have no choice but to double down on our ongoing efforts. |
So, while we’re celebrating the first major climate investments in more than a decade, take stock in the work that remains — and then join us in pushing the Biden administration to keep fossil fuels in the ground, toxics out of our bodies, and ecosystems intact. |
You can take all the actions below by clicking here. |
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Sincerely,
Kyle Berquist
Digital Advocacy Specialist |
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Photo Credits: A tension-leg oil production platform burns off unrecoverable gas and leaves a plume of smoke in the Gulf of Mexico. (Land by Sea / Getty Images) |
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