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Environmental Justice via Industrial Policy

This post is the sixth in a series about human rights and environmental, climate, and energy justice. The series builds on a forthcoming article, Environmental Justice as Environmental Human Rights, by Member Scholar John H. Knox and co-author Nicole Tronolone.

This summer, we marked the one-year anniversary of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), the United States’ most significant climate change law. Many advocates for environmental justice, myself included, were disappointed by several features of the Act, including the greenlighting of certain fossil fuel infrastructure projects. Nevertheless, the law unlocked unprecedented streams of investment into clean energy via tax credits and direct spending mechanisms.

In this post, I process these components of the Act from an environmental justice perspective, one year in. How have they opened new spaces for progress toward environmental justice, and what new challenges do they present? I contend that the Act represents not just a slew of new initiatives, but a new theory of environmental justice that bears closer scrutiny as it moves from paper to practice.

The Biden administration vocalized a strong commitment to environmental justice from the outset with an executive order that prioritized environmental justice in agency decision-making. President Biden also staffed his agencies with many strong environmental justice proponents. But for the first several years, these actors were constrained by existing statutes, precedent, and a U.S. Supreme Court hostile to innovative agency action (leading to, for example, a kerfuffle at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission over an attempted revitalization of natural gas pipeline permitting guidance to include environmental justice considerations).

Then came the memorable 2022 summer of frenetic negotiations that resulted in the passage of the IRA. The Act has been heralded as ushering in a new way of doing climate policy, often referred to as “green industrial policy” or sometimes “Bidenomics.”

In a speech laying out the pillars of this new strategy, National Economic Council Director Brian Deese described this policy as “a strategy to strengthen our supply chains and rebuild our industrial base, across sectors, technologies, and regions.” Now, there’s nothing inherently “green” about that vision, but Deese emphasized responding to climate change as a core goal of this re-industrialization. The IRA concretizes these commitments, creating tax credits expected to spur up to $1.2 trillion in clean-energy-related spending over the next 10 years.

The IRA also contains significant commitments to environmental justice that operate alongside the Biden administration’s Justice40 initiative, which instructs the government to direct 40 percent of the benefits of certain investments to disadvantaged communities. (Note, though, that Justice40 doesn’t apply to tax credits because they aren’t government spending.) Brookings calculates that the law includes around $46 billion for environmental justice programs, including grants for state and regional green banks and for schools and communities to pursue their own climate initiatives. It also codifies environmental justice into its tax credits, providing additional benefits for developers locating their projects in so-called “energy” communities and low-income communities.

These initiatives represent a sea change in the federal government’s approach to environmental justice. The old strategy was largely one of reducing industry-related pollution burdens and ameliorating the legacy of racist siting practices. The new one might be called “industrial environmental justice.” This strategy focuses on bringing investments to historically disadvantaged communities to nurture opportunities, jobs, and resilience. Early analysis suggests the Act has already created 170,600 clean-energy jobs and spurred 210 major new clean energy projects.

In some ways, this new strategy is a welcome development that may catalyze real structural change. At its best, the IRA might promote economic and energy democracy, giving communities not just freedom from unequal pollution burdens but the capital, skills, and autonomy to produce their own visions of a resilient, sustainable future. There are also hopes that the IRA will redistribute wealth and income, thereby proving an antidote to the extreme and racialized inequality facing Americans today. And many of the investments the Act supports are unalloyed goods for communities that receive them, such as electric school buses to replace diesel ones that produce horrific air pollution consequences for the children aboard.

However, green industrial policy raises its own complex environmental justice challenges. For one, the technologies that the IRA promotes are not all as unequivocally good for communities as electric school buses. The Act provides incentives for hydrogen, carbon capture and storage, and nuclear infrastructure that communities may have reasonable reservations about hosting. (Indeed, even wind and solar technologies are unfortunately proving controversial in many affluent communities.) The process and substance of evaluating which infrastructures are beneficial creates its own demands on frequently under-resourced and overstretched community advocates and groups.

As others have observed, the IRA also relies on a strategy of change that assumes that making clean energy affordable and enticing will ultimately drive fossil fuels out of existence. But this eventuality is far from guaranteed. So far, renewable energy’s astounding global growth has proven additive, not displacing. That means that communities most impacted by fossil fuels’ pernicious consequences will continue to have to fight piecemeal battles to protect their health and the planet’s well-being, even as permitting reforms make these battles more difficult.

Many hope that the ‘place-based’ model of the IRA — focused on targeting investments to certain communities — may shift climate politics enough to allow for more robust restrictions on fossil fuels down the road. In the meantime, as IRA implementation proceeds, researchers, policymakers, and activists interested in ensuring that green industrial policy produces environmental justice benefits must dig into the bureaucratic details:

The IRA’s clean energy infrastructure investments provide momentum toward a more equitable energy future, but clean energy is not ineluctably just energy. It will be a struggle of solidarity to make it so.

Showing 2,833 results

Shelley Welton | November 8, 2023

Environmental Justice via Industrial Policy

This summer, we marked the one-year anniversary of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), the United States’ most significant climate change law. Many advocates for environmental justice, myself included, were disappointed by several features of the Act, including the greenlighting of certain fossil fuel infrastructure projects. Nevertheless, the law unlocked unprecedented streams of investment into clean energy via tax credits and direct spending mechanisms.

Lemir Teron | November 6, 2023

A Moment for Energy Justice

Energy justice mandates that renewable energy transitions center marginalized and historically overburdened households, including fenceline and extraction communities, that have faced heightened burdens from the prevalent fossil fuel-based energy system, and further have been mostly overlooked by the burgeoning renewable energy sector.

Carmen Gonzalez, Rebecca Bratspies | November 1, 2023

The Unbearable Whiteness of Environmental Law

Member Scholar John Knox's article, Environmental Justice as Environmental Human Rights, recognizes the many accomplishments of U.S. environmental law while pointedly acknowledging its greatest shortcoming: the failure to address environmental racism. As a solution, the article proposes stronger linkages between environmental justice movements and international human rights law. As the article explains, international human rights law provides an important tool for understanding how environmental racism undermines U.S. environmental law.

Daniel Farber | October 30, 2023

Eco-Pragmatism Meets Human Rights Law

A forthcoming article by John Knox and Nicole Tronolone brings international human rights law to bear on the issue of environmental justice. They argue that international human rights law provides a basis for treating some types of environmental inequities as human rights violations. In particular, they argue that the government has a duty to redress racial disparities in exposure to pollution and toxic chemicals. In their view, the government has conspicuously failed in this duty. In a recent article of my own, I tried to work through questions about how regulations could address economic and racial inequality.

Sidney A. Shapiro | October 25, 2023

The Environmental Justice Stories No One Hears

According to conventional expectations, the idea of incorporating stories in rulemaking will seem radical, but it is conventional expectations that have led to the country’s failure to effectively promote environmental justice. International norms highlight this failure. There cannot be a “right to participate” if the best method of participating — storytelling — is devalued or ignored. Now is the time — past time, really — to build the procedures we need to listen to the environmental justice stories no one hears.

John Knox | October 23, 2023

Environmental Justice as Environmental Human Rights

The quest for environmental justice is also a quest for environmental human rights. The fight is the same fight, and the lessons learned in one arena can help in the other.

Alexandra Klass | October 11, 2023

FERC, Electricity Transmission, and Clean Energy: Even Without New Legislation, Plenty to Do

Under the Federal Power Act, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) has an obligation to maintain national grid reliability and to ensure “just and reasonable” rates for wholesale electricity sales and transmission. Notably, Congress has not granted FERC authority over the siting and permitting of most interstate transmission lines, as it has with interstate natural gas pipelines, leaving that authority over power lines primarily with the states. Even in the absence of congressional action, however, FERC has powerful tools using its existing statutory authority over rates and reliability to incentivize regulated transmission owners and grid planners to build the large-scale regional “macro-grid” the country needs.

Sandy Ma | October 3, 2023

A Shot in the Arm:  New Climate Funding for Maryland

President Biden had ambitious plans, with the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) and 2021 Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (BIL), to rebuild America’s aging infrastructure and revitalize our economy by fighting climate change through creating green jobs, reducing our greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, and championing environmental justice. In the scant few years since the passage of these monumental laws, changes are already taking root. For example, in Maryland, funding is flowing to various sectors of the state — private and public — for grid modernization, transportation planning, funding green banks, and cleaning polluted air, and all of it in the service of environmental justice.

James Goodwin | October 2, 2023

The Hill Op-ed: Ecosystem Economics: How the Biden Administration Is Finally Giving Nature Its Due

If a tree stands in the forest, and there’s no economist around to tabulate its benefits to humans, do those benefits still exist? For government agencies, the answer has long been, “No.” But the Biden administration is poised to change that.