When I was asked to become the first-ever National Climate Advisor to lead the charge in combating the climate crisis, there was a pretty simple reason: the new administration wants to help people.
As we face a pandemic, economic fallout and racial injustices, Americans are grappling with profound pain. While climate change adds another challenge to these crises, it also presents a unique opportunity to begin to solve the unprecedented public health, economic and equity problems we face.
Here’s where we’ll start.
Climate Day last week and Jobs Day this week are intertwined because this is not a zero-sum game. We can tackle the climate crisis and create jobs — putting communities and workers at the forefront at the same time.
We know the challenges we face right now will not be easy to overcome. But the Americans on the frontlines and fence lines of these issues are who our entire administration will think about when leading our efforts to tackle climate change, create jobs and spur America’s economic comeback.
The American people are not going to just be a part of the clean energy revolution that builds a more sustainable and healthier future — they are going to lead it.