Biden Names Obama-Era EPA Chief Gina McCarthy As Climate Czar

The role is seen as a domestic counterpart to John Kerry's job on the international front in the next administration.
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President-elect Joe Biden has tapped Gina McCarthy as his domestic climate czar, tasking the Obama-era Environmental Protection Agency chief with overseeing the new administration’s sweeping plans to overhaul the nation’s energy, agriculture and transportation systems and prepare for the hotter world to come.  

McCarthy, 66, served as a chief architect of the Obama administration’s climate regulations, overseeing the drafting and passage of landmark limits on planet-heating pollution from power plants, vehicles and fossil fuel producers. Following a stint as a professor at Harvard University, she became the president and chief executive of the Natural Resources Defense Council, a lion in the environmental advocacy sphere that has sued the Trump administration more than 100 times to block environmental rollbacks, in January. 

The Washington Post first reported the pick. A spokesperson for McCarthy did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

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Gina McCarthy, head of the Natural Resources Defense Council, had led the Environmental Protection Agency in the Obama administration.
Kim Raff via Getty Images

If confirmed by the Senate, McCarthy would serve as a domestic-side counterpart to John Kerry, the former secretary of state who, as Biden’s special envoy on climate, will oversee a 180-degree turn in U.S. diplomacy on such matters as rejoining the Paris climate accords and working with other nations to curb fossil-fuel emissions that are warming the planet.  

“Every department in the Biden administration should be centering climate action and clean energy in their federal policies and investments,” McCarthy wrote in a tweet earlier this month. “And they should do it in a way that continues to advance labor interests and environmental justice in communities across the country.”

McCarthy is widely respected in the environmental world and has inspired fierce loyalty among those who worked under her at the EPA. The Massachusetts native, with a thick Boston accent, worked in five Massachusetts Democratic and Republican administrations and served as commissioner of the Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection before joining the EPA in 2009. President Barack Obama named her EPA administrator in 2013, a position she held until President Donald Trump took office in 2017. 

While Kerry will also advise the National Security Council on climate issues, McCarthy’s work will ostensibly respond to those warnings with long-overdue policy decisions that could shape the nation’s physical contours for generations to come. The reach and success of such efforts, though, may depend on whether Democrats can gain control of the Senate by winning next month’s runoffs for Georgia’s two seats. If not, the Senate’s GOP majority almost assuredly will work to thwart the administration’s environmental agenda.

By selecting McCarthy, Biden appears to be preparing to implement his climate agenda through executive fiat and regulations. 

“This a real hands-on, butt-in-chair job,” David Goldwyn, president of the energy consultancy Goldwyn Global Strategies and a former White House special energy envoy, told HuffPost. “It requires a Ph.D. in bureaucratic management.”

The priorities, he said, will be making good on Biden’s plan to eliminate power plant emissions by 2035 and transition to a carbon-neutral economy by 2050. 

The last time anyone served as a domestic climate czar, Democrats controlled both chambers of Congress. In 2009, Carol Browner, who headed the Environmental Protection Agency under President Bill Clinton, served as Obama’s director of the newly established White House Office of Energy and Climate Change Policy. Two years later, she quit and the position was abolished following Democrats’ failure to pass a major climate bill through Congress and the GOP winning control of the House.

Since then, scientific projections of the speed and severity of global warming have grown significantly direr. The demands for policy remedies have dramatically shifted in response. In the early 2010s, the consensus in Washington on addressing climate change was that a price on carbon emissions, either through a cap-and-trade system or a tax, was the only viable solution to surging heat-trapping gases. Today, the climate movement ― now led most fervently by youth activists ― has rallied around the framework of a Green New Deal, a Word War II-style federal mobilization to rapidly and dramatically redirect key economic sectors to stem the warming. 

Biden vowed a whole-of-government approach to curbing emissions and adapting the nation’s economy to that goal, rather than siloing the mission to the EPA, Interior Department and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The climate czar position is envisioned as the central coordinator in this approach. 

Other possible names floated for the position included John Podesta, a top Democratic operative who has made climate his central issue in recent years; Jay Inslee, the newly reelected Washington governor who ran as the “climate candidate” in a brief bid for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination; and Ali Zaidi, a climate policy expert and the Office of Management and Budget’s former associate director for natural resources, energy and science. 

The 33-year-old Zaidi, the Post reported, will serve as McCarthy’s deputy.

McCarthy’s name had surfaced recently as a possible nominee to take over at the EPA again. Mary Nichols, the head of the California Air Resources Board, had been the front-runner. But criticism from activists that Nichols’ record as California’s top air regulator hurt Black and Latino communities appeared to tank her standing with the transition team, prompting a scramble to elevate alternative candidates, The New York Times reported this week. 

“Gina McCarthy’s experience and perspective make her the right person to drive the whole government’s mobilization on climate,” Jamal Raad, campaign director of the climate group Evergreen Action, said in a statement. “Now it’s all hands on deck to defeat the climate crisis and rebuild a better economy.”

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Before You Go

Books That Teach Kids To Care About The Environment
"The Watcher"(01 of25)
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This picture book biography traces Jane Goodall's life from her childhood in the U.K. to her years studying chimpanzees in Tanzania to her environmental advocacy. (Available here) (credit:Penguin Random House)
"Don't Let Them Disappear"(02 of25)
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Chelsea Clinton's "Don't Let Them Disappear" details 12 species of endangered animals around the world and shares ways to help prevent their extinction. (Available here) (credit:Penguin Random House)
"Bee & Me"(03 of25)
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Young readers learn about the importance of bees in our ecosystem in "Bee & Me." (Available here) (credit:Candlewick)
"10 Things I Can Do to Help My World"(04 of25)
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"10 Things I Can Do to Help My World" shares simple everyday tips for kids who care for the planet. (Available here) (credit:Candlewick)
"The Water Princess"(05 of25)
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Based on model Georgie Badiel’s childhood, "The Water Princess" follows a young girl who wants to bring potable drinking water to her West African community. (Available here) (credit:G.P. Putnam’s Sons Books for Young Readers)
"Green"(06 of25)
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This Caldecott Honor book is a tribute to the color green and its various shades in our natural world. (Available here) (credit:Roaring Brook Press)
"The Great Kapok Tree"(07 of25)
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Set in the Amazon rainforest, "The Great Kapok Tree" emphasizes the importance of trees to the health of the environment. (Available here) (credit:Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
"Compost Stew"(08 of25)
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This alphabet book offers a child-friendly explanation of composting. (Available here) (credit:Tricycle Press)
"Touch The Earth"(09 of25)
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"Touch The Earth" is the first in a series of three environmental-themed children's books from John Lennon's son Julian. (Available here) (credit:Simon & Schuster)
"Kenya's Art"(10 of25)
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The title character draws inspiration from a museum recycling exhibit and transforms old, broken toys and other items into art. (Available here)
(credit:Charlesbridge)
"Rachel Carson and Her Book That Changed the World"(11 of25)
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Pioneering environmentalist and "Silent Spring" author Rachel Carson is the subject of this picture book biography. (Available here) (credit:Holiday House)
"Miss Maple's Seeds"(12 of25)
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This New York Times bestseller is about a little woman who gathers abandoned seeds and nurtures them into beautiful plants. (Available here) (credit:Penguin Random House)
"Follow The Moon Home"(13 of25)
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"Follow The Moon Home" shows how young people can make a difference through determination and teamwork. (Available here) (credit:Chronicle Books)
"Kate, Who Tamed the Wind"(14 of25)
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This rhythmic book follows a girl who finds an environmentally friendly solution to a problem. (Available here) (credit:Penguin Random House)
"One Love"(15 of25)
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Bob Marley's daughter Cedella adapted his famous song into a children's book about the power of community. (Available here) (credit:Chronicle Books)
"Seeds of Change"(16 of25)
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"Seeds Of Change" details the life of the famous Kenyan environmental activist Wangarĩ Maathai. (Available here) (credit:Lee & Low Books)
"Red Knit Cap Girl and the Reading Tree"(17 of25)
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This installment in the Red Knit Cap Girl series is about a special relationship with an ordinary tree. (Available here) (credit:Little, Brown Books For Young Readers)
"The Adventures of a Plastic Bottle"(18 of25)
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This glimpse into the life of a plastic bottle offers a valuable lesson about recycling. (Available here) (credit:Simon & Schuster)
"City Green"(19 of25)
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"City Green" is about a girl's efforts to plant a garden and create an urban oasis in her community. (Available here) (credit:HarperCollins)
"The Lonely Polar Bear"(20 of25)
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This book about a polar bear in the arctic introduces kids to climate change issues in a gentle way. (Available here) (credit:Fox Chapel Publishing)
"George Saves the World by Lunchtime"(21 of25)
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In this story, a boy named George learns the power of recycling at the suggestion of his grandfather. (Available here) (credit:Eden Children's Books)
"Grandpa's Garden"(22 of25)
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The protagonist of this story experiences the magic of gardening and watching fruits and vegetables grow. (Available here) (credit:Barefoot Books)
"We Planted a Tree"(23 of25)
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Two families in different parts of the world plant each plant a tree in this poetic book. (Available here) (credit:Dragonfly Books)
"One Plastic Bag"(24 of25)
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Activist Isatou Ceesay is the subject of this book about the recycling efforts in the Gambia. (Available here) (credit:Millbrook Press)
"One World"(25 of25)
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"One World" illustrates concerns about pollution through the story of siblings spending a day at the seashore. (Available here) (credit:Andersen Press)