Barack Obama has announced this weekend that the budget for renewable energy funding will be doubling within five years in an attempt to commit to pledges made during the Paris Climate Summit in 2015.
Making climate change the focus of his ‘Weekly Address’ emphasising his vision for a renewable future in the US, the President stated that he will be sending the proposal to Congress this week.
The US will be the first country to act on the multi-billion dollar clean energy research and development plan agreed upon by 20 nations at the COP21 UN climate summit.
Dubbed “Mission Innovation”, the renewable energy plan is focused around developing the clean energy sectors of the participating nations, with the US dedicating $12.8 billion to their own sector, which is up from a previous budget of $6.4 billion.
Other signatories to “Mission Innovation” include Saudi Arabia, Brazil, India, Japan and China – all of whom have pledged to move their economies away from fossil fuels and towards renewable energy sources.
“Rather than subsidise the past, we should invest in the future, that’s why the budget I’ll send to congress this Tuesday will double funding for clean energy research and development by 2020” said Obama in his Weekly Address on Saturday.
Obama’s budget reforms come after the International Renewable Energy Agency announced that increasing renewable energy to 36 percent of the global energy mix by 2030 will generate about half of the emissions reductions needed to keep global warming under two degrees Celsius.
Obama’s push for clean energy growth in the US is not supported by all of his political counterparts. The President himself acknowledged the clear differences in opinion coming from mainly Republican congressmen, but emphasised that his proposal is as much about economics as it is the environment.
“While republicans in congress are still considering their position on climate change, many of them realise that clean energy is an incredible source of good paying jobs for their constituents” he said.
The announcement will be a part of the final spending blueprint of Obama’s presidency, making it an important reflection of his values as a president and politician.
The President outlined that the environment and the economy are equal focuses of the budget increase, stating that “clean power from the wind or the sun is actually cheaper in many communities than dirtier conventional power”.
“[The budget increase] will include new investments to help the private sector create more jobs faster, lower the cost of clean energy faster and help clean, renewable power out-compete dirty fuels in every state”.
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