Biden Sounds Alarm On Climate Change In Visit To Hurricane-Wracked New Jersey

Enlarge this image

President Biden takes part in a briefing with New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy and other local leaders in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida on Tuesday.

Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images


Weather
Stunned By Ida, The Northeast Begins To Recover And Worry About The Next Storm

New Jersey was among the states hardest hit by the deadly storm, which made landfall in Louisiana and swept to the northeast, bringing with it historic rainfall, gale-force winds and sprinkling several tornadoes in its path.

Ida was New Jersey’s fourth hundred-year storm in just two decades, Somerset County Commissioner Director Shanel Robinson said during the briefing. And experts have warned that such natural disasters will only get more common and more powerful as human-influenced global warming continues.

Dozens of people died from Ida’s wrath alone, while on the other side of the country, deadly wildfires continue to burn out of control, eating away miles of landscape and infrastructure and threatening the air quality for residents of the West Coast.


Climate
Climate Change Is The Greatest Threat To Public Health, Top Medical Journals Warn

«Every part of the country is getting hit by extreme weather. And we’re now living in real time what the country’s going to look like,» Biden said.

«We can’t turn it back very much, but we can prevent it from getting worse.»

Since taking office, Biden has vowed to tackle climate change while boosting the nation’s middle class by funding green jobs initiatives as part of his «Build Back Better» agenda.


Politics
Manchin Calls On Democrats To Hit Pause On The $3.5 Trillion Budget Package

Climate change has also taken center-stage in Democrats’ historic $3.5 trillion congressional budget plan, which has seen Senate Republicans — and some Democrats — outraged at the plan’s hefty price tag.

Комментарии 0