Bernie Sanders’s $16.3T climate plan promises major waste and recycling shifts

Bernie Sanders Credit: Creative Commons

Rina Li reports for Waste Dive

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., announced a sweeping climate platform last week characterizing climate change as a “global emergency” and pledging $16.3 trillion to address the crisis – including via multiple waste and recycling initiatives.

The plan, which builds on the Green New Deal, calls for the establishment of a nationwide recycling program as well as a $160 billion investment in food waste reduction and composting programs.

It would also enact a national right-to-repair policy for farm equipment and make “massive” R&D investments, including in chemical recycling for plastics. The plan seeks to ensure a “just transition” for communities and workers impacted or displaced by the closure of incinerators, hazardous waste sites and other polluting facilities; landfills are not mentioned specifically.

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Unveiled last Thursday in the wildfire-devastated town of Paradise, California, Sanders’s platform is described by media outlets and political commentators as the “boldest,” most aggressive climate plan yet released by a 2020 Democratic candidate.

“The climate crisis is not only the single greatest challenge facing our country; it is also our single greatest opportunity to build a more just and equitable future,” the plan stresses, “But we must act immediately.”

The plan aims to reach 100% renewable energy for electricity and transportation by 2030 and complete decarbonization by 2050. It also outlines several elements pertaining to the waste and recycling industries, including:

  • A nationwide materials recycling program. Sanders’s platform promises extensive R&D for renewable technologies — which, in order to prevent an “outsized” environmental impact from harvesting raw materials, requires the use of “as many recycled materials as possible.” The proposal seeks to establish an extended producer responsibility program requiring large corporations to pay to take back used goods from consumers – which will be processed in a national recycling program and used to “build the renewable energy equipment needed to transform our energy system.”
  • A just transition for frontline communities. The plan shines a spotlight on communities “at the frontlines of the climate emergency,” citing a New School report revealing that nearly 80% of U.S. incinerators are located in poor communities and/or communities of color. It seeks to advance environmental justice principles by expanding EPA investigations into environmental racism, updating permitting rules for polluting facilities, and proposing tighter regulations on hazardous waste sites, chemical and industrial plants, and decaying infrastructure. Sanders also aims to make Green New Deal jobs and training resources – including for cleaner manufacturing and recycling – available to disadvantaged and/or displaced workers.
  • Expanded organics and sustainable agriculture infrastructure. The plan calls for a $410 billion investment in transitioning farms to “ecologically regenerative agricultural practices,” including carbon sequestration and a national right-to-repair law for farm equipment (the latter of which was previously proposed by Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass). Moreover, it pledges a $160 billion investment in food waste reduction and composting programs.

Neil Seldman, co-founder of the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, praised many aspects of the Sanders plan – particularly its provision of a just transition for workers displaced by the shift away from certain industries. While the proposal emphasizes fossil fuel workers, Seldman noted to Waste Dive that it is “particularly important for the waste industry, where citizens are winning battles to shut down incinerators.”

He also commended the inclusion of right to repair — while expressing hopes that the proposal of a nationwide policy might be expanded to include other industries.

Sanders’s platform, while one of the highest-profile climate commitments to emerge since the 2020 race kicked off, isn’t the only plan that explicitly touches on waste issues.

Andrew Yang’s climate plan, revealed this week in a detailed blog post, promises $4.87 trillion in climate-related spending over two decades — a portion of which will go toward tripling annual mandatory funding for biogas to $200 million. Yang also proposes establishing an e-waste recycling program to account for rapidly developing battery technology, noting that sustainability “means designing products with their disposal in mind.”

The campaign proposals come at a time of heightened federal attention on waste. The latest Farm Bill allocates a collective $125 million for food waste reduction and composting programs, and a new federal bill (H.R. 3744) is proposing the creation of a new 30% investment tax credit for qualifying biogas and nutrient recovery projects.

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Delaware Estuary Partnership has a new executive director

WILMINGTON — On Thursday, PDE’s Board of Directors announced that Kathy Klein is the permanent head of the non-profit organization that hosts the Delaware Estuary Program. Klein has served as PDE’s interim executive director since mid-March, following the departure of Jennifer Adkins.

Kathy Klein

Although some of the faces are new, the lead role at PDE is a familiar one for Klein, who was PDE’s executive director from 1997 to 2007. She rejoined the organization’s staff in September 2018 as the director of donor relations.

“This place feels like home to me,” Klein said of her return to the Partnership. “Coming back here last year brought me out of semi-retirement. Every day, I come to work with an incredible group of smart and accomplished individuals who work to improve the environment and make the world a better place. I am looking forward to the years ahead of collaborating with our staff, PDE’s Board, and our fantastic partners to make our waterways cleaner, habitats healthier, and communities stronger.”

Klein has worked for 30 years to improve environmental quality in the Delaware River Watershed. She has been a leader in the development, strategic planning, and programmatic design and implementation efforts of several regional organizations. Before returning to PDE, she was executive director of the Water Resources Association of the Delaware River Basin. PDE leads science-based and collaborative efforts to improve the tidal Delaware River and Bay, which spans Delaware, New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

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“Throughout her impressive career, Kathy has been a tireless advocate for clean water initiatives in our valuable watershed,” said PDE Board President Joseph Tarsavage.  “To say we’re fortunate to have her would be an understatement, and I speak for our entire board in telling you that we look forward to the next phase of PDE’s development under her leadership.”

Klein has a bachelor’s degree in Environmental Science from the University of Colorado, Boulder. She resides in Wilmington with her family and dog, Kai.

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Trump to relax restrictions on methane, a powerful greenhouse gas

Pumpjacks operating in the western edge of California’s Central Valley northwest of Bakersfield. (Brian Melley/AP)

By Juliet Eilperin and Brady Dennis of the Washington Post

The Environmental Protection Agency announced Thursday that it plans to loosen federal rules on methane by allowing oil and gas operators to largely police themselves when it comes to preventing the powerful greenhouse gas from leaking out of new wells, pipelines and other infrastructure.

It also challenges the notion, championed under the Obama administration, that the federal government has the authority to regulate methane without first making a detailed determination that it qualifies as a pollutant under the Clean Air Act.

If successful, that change could hamper future administrations from enacting tougher restrictions on methane. Already, the Trump administration has taken several steps to limit the government’s ability to regulate other greenhouse gases in the future, including in a recently finalized rule on carbon dioxide emissions from power plants.

EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler said in a statement Thursday that the latest proposal removes “unnecessary and duplicative” regulatory burdens. “The Trump administration recognizes that methane is valuable, and the industry has an incentive to minimize leaks and maximize its use.”

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The move is the latest in a series of Trump administration actions aimed at undoing previous efforts to combat climate change in the interest of unburdening companies from regulation and reducing their costs. Thursday’s proposal, like some others before it, faced mixed reaction from the oil and gas industries meant to benefit from it.

BP President Susan Dio said in a statement that the EPA should regulate methane emissions. “It’s not only the right thing to do for the environment, there is also a clear business case for doing this,” she said. “The more gas we keep in our pipes and equipment, the more we can provide to the market — and the faster we can all move toward a lower-carbon future.”

Smaller operators, however, had lobbied the administration to lift the requirements. Lee Fuller, a vice president at the Independent Petroleum Association of America, said in an interview that the Obama rule had “made it really onerous on small businesses.”

Methane is a significant contributor to the world’s greenhouse gas emissions. It is 80 times as potent as carbon dioxide, though it doesn’t last as long in the atmosphere, nor is it emitted on the same scale.

Scientists have projected that the world needs to cut its overall greenhouse gas emissions nearly in half by mid-century to avert catastrophic effects from global warming. According to the EPA, methane accounted for more than 10 percent of all U.S. greenhouse gas emissions from human activities as recently as 2017. Nearly a third of those emissions were generated by the natural gas and petroleum industry.

Several Democratic presidential candidates seized on the news to argue that President Trump should be ousted, underscoring the sharp divide between the two parties on the issue.

“With the Amazon burning, farms under water, and hurricanes looming, Trump has decided to lift regulations on methane — one of the most dangerous greenhouse gases. Even oil and gas companies think this is too far. We need a President who will act on climate, not make it worse,” tweeted former Texas congressman Beto O’Rourke.

Anne Idsal, assistant administrator​ of the EPA’s Office of Air and Radiation, said the administration is confident that methane emissions will continue to decline over time, even without the current regulations.

“Methane is a valuable resource,” Idsal told reporters in a call Thursday. “There’s every incentive for industry to minimize any type of fugitive methane emissions, capture it, use it and sell it down the road.”

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David McCabe, a senior scientist at the Clean Air Task Force, noted that the biggest cuts in methane emissions from the gas and oil sector have happened during exploration. Emissions dropped sharply in 2012 and 2016, respectively, after new federal requirements for pollution controls took effect.

“The best information we have is that the emissions dropped because of regulations,” McCabe said.

The EPA estimates that the proposed changes, which will be subject to public comment for 60 days after they are published, would save the oil and natural gas industry $17 million to $19 million a year. That is a small fraction of the industry’s annual revenue, which exceeds $100 billion annually.

Several of the world’s biggest fossil-fuel companies, including Exxon, Shell and BP, have opposed the rollback and urged the Trump administration to keep the standards in place. Collectively, these firms account for 11 percent of the nation’s natural gas output. In a statement Thursday, Shell U.S. President Gretchen Watkins noted that the company has pledged to reduce its methane leaks from its global operations to less than 0.2 percent by 2025.

Asked about that support for methane regulation, Idsal said each company must decide its own path. “We don’t preclude anybody from going above and beyond, if they think that’s what they need to do from a business and a compliance standpoint,” she said.

Large oil companies are not the only industry to push back against some of the White House’s attempts to scale back environmental regulations.

Last month, four major automakers struck a deal with California to produce more fuel-efficient vehicles in coming years, undercutting one of the Trump administration’s most aggressive climate policy rollbacks. And some electric utilities opposed weakening limits on toxic mercury pollution that were put in place under the Obama administration.

Erik Milito, a vice president at the American Petroleum Institute, said in an interview that oil and gas firms have adopted different policy positions in part because some operate globally instead of just in the United States. But he said the EPA was right to question the legal justification for the Obama-era standard.

“What they’re tackling is whether methane can lawfully be a regulatory pollutant,” he said. “We have a strong consensus that federal agencies need to follow the letter of the law. They did not do that, and they are going back and correcting that.”

Jody Freeman, a climate adviser to President Barack Obama who now teaches at Harvard Law School, said the Trump administration’s rollback will slow down any future administration that wants to aggressively rein in methane emissions.

“The practical impact is that a new administration would have to start again,” she said in an email. “It hampers a new administration by adding delay.”

Idsal said the agency will continue to require oil and gas companies to limit the release of what are known as “volatile organic compounds,” which include methane, but only during drilling and processing. Milito noted that by 2023, 90 percent of oil and gas facilities will have to install technology curbing volatile organic compounds.

Still, the EPA acknowledged that its proposed rollback could have public health implications. The fact that more volatile organic compounds could be released, the agency wrote in its proposal, “will degrade air quality and are likely to adversely affect health and welfare” due to more air pollution. But, the agency added, “we are unable to quantify these effects at this time.”

In September, the Interior Department eased requirements that oil and gas firms operating on federal and tribal land capture the release of methane.

Environmentalists threatened to fight the Trump administration’s latest move in court.

Kassie Siegel, director of the Climate Law Institute at the Center for Biological Diversity, an advocacy group, called the proposal reckless, saying it shows “complete contempt for our climate.” She said that even the Obama administration’s efforts to limit methane emissions were modest, given the significant amount that escapes into the atmosphere each year.

“The Obama rule was like a Band-Aid on a gaping wound,” Siegel said. “The Trump administration is so fanatical that they couldn’t even live with the Band-Aid. They had to rip off the Band-Aid.”

The Obama administration’s push to impose the first limits on methane emissions from the oil and gas industry in 2016 came shortly after the EPA found that emissions were on an upswing at a time when booming U.S. shale oil and gas drilling had dramatically driven down the prices of domestic natural gas and global oil alike.

Ben Ratner, a senior director at the advocacy group Environmental Defense Fund, said in an interview that rolling back the regulations could reward bad actors in the industry. Given that many major players had embraced limits on methane, Ratner added, Thursday’s proposal suggests that the Trump administration opposes regulating greenhouse gases on principle.

“It’s more of an ideological reaction to regulation of any climate pollutant by the federal government,” he said.

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Murphy names three enviro-activists to NJ Highlands Council

David Waldstein reports for New Jersey Globe

The governor submitted the names of Rutgers Professor Daniel Van Abs,  a longtime member of the New Jersey Clean Water Council, Wynnie-Fred Victor Hinds, a member of the Newark Environmental Commission, and environmental lawyer Bill Kibler to the Senate today.

“Ensuring clean drinking water, economic vitality, and a thriving ecosystem in the New Jersey Highlands is of existential importance to the millions of residents that rely on the health of that region,” Murphy said.“The responsibility of protecting the Highlands is one our Administration does not take lightly, and the promise of a fully operational Highlands Council is one that I am proud to fulfill.”

Van Abs is an associate professor for Water, Society and the Environment at the Rutgers School of Environmental and Biological Sciences.  He was first named to the Clean Water Council by Gov. Richard Codey in 2005 and served as chairman from 2014 to 2015.

Hinds, the Executive Director of Stepping Stones Resources, was named to the city’s Environmental Commission by Mayor Ras Baraka in 2015.  She is the Newark West Ward Climate Resiliency Coordinator for the New Jersey Environmental Justice Alliance and a member of the grassroots Newark Water Group.

Kibler, a self-described “Tree Hugger,” was the Executive Director of the South Branch Watershed Association from 2005 until Raritan Headwaters was created in 2011.  He is a West Point graduate who served with the Army Corps of Engineers and as the Chief of the Califon Fire Department.

“These three excellent candidates will add tremendous knowledge and support to the Council’s important work,” said Julia Somers, Executive Director of the New Jersey Highlands Coalition. “We thank the Governor for making such thoughtful, stellar appointment recommendations, and look forward to their being approved quickly by the State Senate. It’s gratifying to know such great candidates are prepared to work on behalf of their home State. I am sure they will be welcomed by the Council.”

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League of Conservation Voters applauds Governor’s appointments

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NJ’s Hunterdon County aims to save $123K in electric costs by using renewable energy sources

Caroline Fassett reports for NJ.com

Beginning Oct. 1, an electric service contract will require up to 48% of electric power used by Hunterdon County government to come from renewable energy sources.

In place of the current state standard JCP&L rate of 8.929 cents per kilowatt-hour, through the contract, the county will pay an electric service enhanced renewable rate of 8.103 cents per kilowatt-hour.

This could bring nearly $123,000 in electric cost savings for the county over the next two years, or between 9% and 10% of what the county spent on electricity in 2018.

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According to County Administrator Kevin P. Davis, in October, up to 43% of the electricity used by the county will be drawn from renewable sources — 23% higher than the state standard requirement.

Next year, when the state standard requirement increases from 20% to 28%, the county will receive up to 48% of its electricity from renewable sources in alignment with the electric service contract.

The contract, approved by Hunterdon County Freeholders on Aug. 20, continues to Sept. 30, 2021.

Of the 26 municipalities in Hunterdon County, nine agreed to also participate in the contract: Alexandria, Bloomsbury, Califon, Delaware, East Amwell, Flemington, Frenchtown, Kingwood and Raritan.

These municipalities will elect to either imitate the county and seek to have up to 48% of its electricity drawn from renewable sources, or purchase electricity through a provider that adheres to state renewable energy requirements.

Davis said if any of the municipalities fail to elect an option by Sept. 12, that municipality will automatically receive electricity that aligns with state renewable energy standards.

If all nine municipalities elect the “green” option, they will cumulatively save approximately $30,000 in electric costs over the course of two years, Davis said.

“The whole reason behind doing everything that we did was in an attempt to save money for the county and for the municipalities as well,” Lanza said. “If this reverse auction did not yield a satisfactory result, we were free to reject the bid. Since it worked for us and for everybody else, we accepted the bid.”

Concord Energy Services, along with the county’s Purchasing Division, organized the online reverse auction bidding process and coordinated the participation of the Hunterdon municipal governments in the shared service program at no direct cost to the county.

Davis said that he hopes more municipalities in the county will participate in the contract in 2021.

“We anticipate, in two years – if we do this again, which I think we would because shared services is a big deal in Hunterdon County – more towns will join in,” Davis said.

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Jailed official claims Booker’s mayoral campaign profited from corrupt Newark agency

By Karen Yi | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

The ex-director of the agency that once managed Newark’s water told federal investigators in 2015 that she pressured vendors to make campaign contributions to then-mayor Cory Booker and his political friends, new court records show.

Linda Watkins-Brashear, who is currently serving an eight-year sentence for soliciting bribes in exchange for no-show contracts, said a Booker ally at the Newark Watershed Conservation and Development Corp. set a donation goal for vendors who usually bought $500 fundraising tickets without question, she told the FBI. If they refused, there were repercussions, her testimony said.

Watkins-Brashear’s 2015 interviews with federal prosecutors were filed as part of an ongoing federal court case of another contractor allegedly involved in the $1 million kickback scheme that eventually toppled the NWCDC.

The records raise new questions about Booker’s record as mayor of Newark, the 2006-2013 tenure that was a springboard to his successful U.S. Senate campaign and his current bid to win the Democratic Party nomination for the presidency. Booker has repeatedly said he was unaware of the corruption that eventually led to the agency’s downfall.

“Without any supporting evidence or corroboration whatsoever, this baseless story rests entirely on the disputed words of a person who, to feed an out-of-control gambling addiction, schemed to defraud the people of Newark and lied to the FBI about it,” Sabrina Singh, a spokeswoman for his presidential campaign, said Thursday after the story published.

Singh previously told NJ Advance Media Booker “faithfully executed his duties” at the NWCDC “where a small group of employees and contractors conspired to conceal their criminal enterprise so effectively that accountants and even independent auditors didn’t discover the fraud.”

“For years as mayor, Cory waged a public battle to reform Newark’s water system, but those efforts were repeatedly blocked by opponents,” she said in a statement. “When serious evidence of wrongdoing at the watershed emerged, then-Mayor Booker took immediate action to dissolve it and bring its operations under direct control of the city.”

Linda Watkins-Brashear, Executive Director Newark Watershed Conservation and Development Corporation, presents the case for the MUA as Newark Mayor Cory Booker, right, listens, in a 2010 photo.

The NWCDC was tasked with managing the city’s reservoirs and treating water at the Pequannock water treatment plant that now serves more than 300,000 customers in North Jersey. But the plant has come under fire in recent years after failed treatment caused lead to leach into the city’s tap water in 2017. The city this month began distributing bottled water as lead levels remain high.

“I find it very alarming that this was the entity set up to ensure water quality in Newark and this is what they’re doing, they’re putting the squeeze on contractors and vendors for campaign contributions,” said Guy Sterling, a Newark resident who helped expose wrongdoing at the NWCDC and a former reporter for The Star-Ledger.

scathing February 2014 state comptroller report found rampant abuse of public funds, illegal payments and sweetheart deals at the NWCDC and said it operated free of meaningful oversight despite $10 million in annual service contracts from the city to manage water assets.

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