U.S. outclassed on sustainability

From: POLITICO's The Long Game - Tuesday Sep 12,2023 04:03 pm
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Sep 12, 2023 View in browser
 
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By Jordan Wolman

Presented by Prologis

THE BIG IDEA

Students walk to school.

U.S. teachers feel cramped for time and resources to teach about sustainable development topics. | Eric Gay/AP Photo

CLASSROOM WOES — If the U.S. is going to play a leading role in the long-term struggle to combat climate change, you would think that educating tomorrow's leaders about what's at stake might be a key step toward that goal. But a large majority of American teachers say they lack the time, materials and expertise to provide instruction on climate change.

When it comes to confidence that they have sufficient tools and support from school boards and parents to incorporate teaching on sustainable development, educators in this country lag far behind their peers in India, Canada, Brazil and France, according to a new report from the Smithsonian Science Education Center and Gallup.

And it’s not because of a lack of interest. Eight in 10 U.S. teachers said teaching about sustainability is important — on par with their international peers — but only 20 percent said they get the time needed to teach about it. More than half said topics such as clean energy, responsible consumption, and climate action receive too little attention. Just 31 percent of U.S. teachers said clean energy, for instance, is a dedicated part of curriculum, compared with 78 percent in Brazil.

It’s just another obstacle for U.S. K-12 teachers, who are also coping with developmental delays resulting from the Covid-19 pandemic on top of the fact that classrooms in some parts of the country have become ground zero in a culture war that has increasingly focused on sustainability issues.

Texas officials advocated for textbooks that emphasize the positive aspects of fossil fuels. Ohio lawmakers are considering a measure that would require colleges and universities to teach “both sides” of climate change. Schools in Florida and Oklahoma could use content from PragerU, a conservative group partially funded by the fossil fuel industry.

Meanwhile, a few states have moved to beef up their sustainability and climate-related curriculums. New Jersey became the first state in 2020 to mandate climate change education in its learning standards, followed by Connecticut. Bills in California and New York this session that would require those states to do the same did not advance.

Unlike in the U.S., where views on the need to address climate change vary from state to state and from one presidential administration to the next, the other countries in the Smithsonian/Gallup report make education policy at the federal level, which isn’t going to happen here.

“In the U.S., the states make that determination around standards or curriculum,” said Carol O’Donnell, the director of the Smithsonian Science Education Center. “So it's much more difficult to see widespread implementation of something throughout a country that's as big as the U.S. when each state is responsible for what happens within that state. Whereas in places like Brazil and India, they have each put in place policies that specifically reference sustainable development.”

So what can be done? The report pointed to some remedies that teachers believed could bolster classroom instruction in sustainable development topics. More than half of U.S. teachers also said field trips and hands-on materials would help them teach about sustainability.

More than six in 10 U.S. teachers said in the Smithsonian-Gallup report that they would benefit from professional development on a wide range of issues, like clean energy and clean water. Those are topics that teachers and administrators said were less likely to clearly align with their district goals.

 

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AROUND THE NATION

 NEW CORPORATE CLIMATE — A California bill that would change the game for corporate disclosure of climate information passed the Assembly Monday.

The legislation would require all large public and private companies operating in the Golden State to disclose their greenhouse gas emissions, including pollution generated within their supply chains.

Assembly passage was a key step for state Sen. Scott Wiener’s SB253, which fell one vote short in that chamber last year. It’s now on track to reach Gov. Gavin Newsom’s desk once it clears a concurrence vote in the Senate.

Wiener (D-San Francisco) amended the bill in the last days of session to win the support of businesses like Apple and Google as well as moderate Democrats in the Assembly.

"California will once again lead the nation with this ambitious step to tackle the climate crisis and ensure corporate transparency," he said in a statement.

Wiener’s legislation would apply to some 5,400 companies and go further than proposed federal climate disclosure rules. A second bill that would require all large companies operating in the state to disclose their climate-related financial risks still awaits a floor vote. Newsom hasn’t said whether he’d sign either bill into law. He’d have to sign or veto them by Oct. 14.

 

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WASHINGTON WATCH

THE EV-CHINA DILEMMA — How much China is too much China? Ford is testing those limits in our Inflation Reduction Act world as the Biden administration attempts to write the rules.

Ford’s plan to use Chinese battery technology at its new Michigan factory is turning up the pressure on the White House, placing “foreign entities of concern” No. 1 in the middle of its electric vehicle push. Some lawmakers and U.S. companies want Ford’s choice to use Chinese battery technology to disqualify it from accessing the consumer tax credits the IRA awards qualifying EVs.

The battle could play a major role in Treasury’s work on guidance for the foreign entities of concern provision, which was expected in March but has been delayed, leaving the industry in limbo. It’s now expected by the end of the year. Ford insists it’s playing by the rules because it owns the battery plant and has pledged that no taxpayer dollars will flow to Beijing.

It makes for “a hugely significant test case for the United States government,” said Michael Dunne, CEO of investment advisory firm ZoZoGo.

 

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AROUND THE WORLD

COURSE CORRECTION — Leaders from Africa, Europe and the Caribbean made crystal clear what’s needed out of the U.N.’s climate change summit this year: global goals to triple renewable energy capacity and double annual savings of energy use by 2030.

“COP28 will offer the world a critical chance to course-correct on climate change,” they said.

The leaders have in the past made these demands individually, Karl Mathiesen reports. But during a record-warm year and in the wake of a dire U.N. report on the state of global climate efforts, they are turning up the pressure on others to chart “a common horizon.”

 

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YOU TELL US

GAME ON — Welcome to the Long Game, where we tell you about the latest on efforts to shape our future. Join us every Tuesday as we keep you in the loop on the world of sustainability.

Team Sustainability is editor Greg Mott and reporters Jordan Wolman and Allison Prang. Reach us all at gmott@politico.com, jwolman@politico.com and aprang@politico.com.

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WHAT WE'RE CLICKING

— The head of the world's leading energy watchdog is hailing "the beginning of the end of the fossil fuel era," according to the Financial Times.

— Meanwhile, a key state regulator tells Bloomberg that California shouldn't rule out keeping nuclear as part of its power portfolio as renewables scale up.

EU lawmakers agreed to boost the share of renewables in its energy mix as the bloc transitions away from fossil fuels. The Associated Press has that one.

 

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