Biden Administration Question for the Scientific Community: Breakthroughs in Science and Technology
President Biden is asking his science advisors to answer five important questions to help guide his administration. Please share your insights on these important questions:
How can breakthroughs in science and technology create powerful new solutions to address climate change—propelling market-driven change, jump-starting economic growth, improving health, and growing jobs, especially in communities that have been left behind?
How can breakthroughs in science and technology create powerful new solutions to address climate change—propelling market-driven change, jump-starting economic growth, improving health, and growing jobs, especially in communities that have been left behind?
MMC
The key is market-based solutions and changes. If the goal of climate change is to reduce the causes of climate warming, the goal of government should be to: 1) fund the basic research needed to understand the causes and sources, 2) to provide monetary incentives to adapt new solutions (via specific tax policies which can either penalize and/or reward the shift to new technology breakthroughs), and 3) to help provide some degree of "insurance" that the large investments necessary to adapt a new technology would be protected - either directly by providing initial start-up funds, or by some type of tax policy to help protect against catastrophic failure.
Critical support can also be provided by the government by: 1) ensuring long-term commitment to environmental science funding (free from political manipulation), 2) enforcement of anti-discrimination policies - e.g., ensure that full life-cycle analyses are done so that marginal communities are neither left behind nor bearing the brunt of implementation of new changes - and, 3) ensuring that funds for job retraining are available to help people transition to new technologies (again, with clear transparent rules, which must be subject to auditing, to ensure communities and minority groups are not left behind.
Critical support can also be provided by the government by: 1) ensuring long-term commitment to environmental science funding (free from political manipulation), 2) enforcement of anti-discrimination policies - e.g., ensure that full life-cycle analyses are done so that marginal communities are neither left behind nor bearing the brunt of implementation of new changes - and, 3) ensuring that funds for job retraining are available to help people transition to new technologies (again, with clear transparent rules, which must be subject to auditing, to ensure communities and minority groups are not left behind.
DMB