US VOTERS have delivered their verdict, handing Barack Obama four more years as president. But how will history judge his performance on climate change ? which barely got a look-in during the campaign, but may later come to be seen as the defining issue of our era?
Passing new laws to cut greenhouse gas emissions remains unlikely, with the House of Representatives still controlled by a Republican majority dominated by climate change sceptics. But Obama has a few key policy levers at his disposal via existing laws ? and in his second, and final, term may be less wary of using them.
His best hope is the 1970 Clean Air Act . Two landmark Supreme Court rulings, in 2007 and 2011, established that it gives the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) the power to regulate greenhouse gases.
Job fears
But with Republican opponents railing against "job-killing" EPA regulations, the Obama administration was cautious about using this power in the run-up to an election dominated by job prospects in a fragile economy.
That may change, suggests Buzz Thompson, co-director of the Woods Institute for the Environment at Stanford University in California, given that Obama no longer has to worry about getting re-elected: "Most presidents, as they get to their second term, start to think about legacy ? what are they going to be remembered for?"
Public opinion may also be shifting in favour of action. The latest polling from the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication shows that belief in the reality of climate change, and concern about its effects, are at their highest levels since 2008. Significantly, there is growing unease about the link between climate change and extreme weather, with 74 per cent of Americans now agreeing that "global warming is affecting weather in the United States".
Hurricane Sandy
Having achieved a renewed mandate ? albeit by a slender margin in the popular vote ? and with the devastation wrought by hurricane Sandy fresh in the memory, Obama may be well placed to seize the moment. "I do think there's an opportunity, if the president chooses to take it, to show leadership and get attention on the cost that climate change is likely to cause," says Kevin Kennedy, who heads the US climate initiative of the World Resources Institute in Washington DC.
Regulating US power plant emissions, which account for about 40 per cent of the nation's output of carbon dioxide, is the top priority. "That's the biggest opportunity for progress in the next few years," says David Doniger, climate policy specialist with the Natural Resources Defense Council in Washington DC.
The EPA has already written draft regulations to limit emissions from new power plants, but the main opportunity for big reductions lies with new rules on emissions from existing facilities. According to a recent analysis from Resources for the Future in Washington DC, cuts of up to 5 per cent from existing plants could keep the US roughly on target to meet Obama's 2009 pledge to reduce US greenhouse gas releases by 17 per cent by 2020, compared with 2005 levels. How this gets implemented will depend on how the regulations are written but may include improving the efficiency of existing plants or increasing the output of nuclear plants.
Methane leaks
Advocates for cuts also see a chance to curb leaks of methane from natural gas production and distribution pipelines.
In August, the EPA issued rules to limit air pollution by volatile organic compounds from "fracking" which should, as a by-product, also reduce emissions of methane. Impetus to address methane leaks directly should come from an ongoing study involving the gas industry and the Environmental Defense Fund, which aims to put hard numbers on the amount of methane lost across the natural gas supply chain.
Other key decisions include the fate of the Keystone XL pipeline, which would pump oil from Canada's tar sands to refineries in Texas. This will land on Obama's desk after an environmental review is completed next year.
In his victory speech in Chicago, Obama talked of an America "that isn't threatened by the destructive power of a warming planet". So the post-election message is this: forget about new laws to limit climate change, but watch for action nonetheless.
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