By Hayley Smith Staff Writer
Excerpts: The run-up to the 2024 presidential election has been supercharged by hot-button issues ranging from abortion to immigration. But for many voters, climate change remains top-of-mind as the country continues to grapple with devastating storms, explosive wildfires and record-breaking heat waves.
Vice President Kamala Harris’ Democratic running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, has an impressive track record when it comes to climate action, experts and advocates say. During his tenure as governor, Walz has passed dozens of initiatives focused on clean energy and transportation, air and water quality, and environmental justice — many of which mirror California’s own ambitious goals.
“California’s reputation as a climate leader is well-deserved, and Walz is a perfect example of what that looks like,” said Mike Young, senior political and organizing director with California Environmental Voters.
“It’s actually a great pairing because at the top of the ticket is somebody from California who’s also been a champ,” he said, referring to Harris’ own climate record. “And climate and clean energy and environmental justice are key areas where nationally they should continue to lead, and certainly in California and Minnesota they should continue to lead.”
Transitioning Minnesota toward clean energy and reducing the state’s fossil fuel emissions have been some of Walz’s top environmental priorities as governor. His Climate Action Framework, released in 2022, notes that “climate change is an existential threat for all people in Minnesota.”
Among its stated goals are slashing Minnesota’s greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030 and achieving carbon neutrality by 2050. (California has set a similar goal of reaching carbon neutrality by 2045.)
To get there, Walz has worked to accelerate renewable energy projects in the state, including recent legislation to expedite the process for permitting wind and solar projects by as much as 12 months.
What’s more, Walz’s plan will require Minnesota utilities to generate 100% of their electricity from carbon-free sources by 2040 — a goal that is “even more ambitious than similar measures in traditionally progressive states,” according to Cassidy DiPaola, communications director for the nonprofit Fossil Free Media.
“Governor Walz’s evolution into a climate champion, sparked by witnessing the impacts of extreme weather on his rural constituents, reflects a growing understanding of climate change as an immediate and devastating threat to communities across America,” DiPaola said in a statement.
Walz also signed an executive order in 2019 that established a climate change sub-cabinet in the state, which is tasked with identifying new strategies to meet greenhouse gas reduction goals and “prepare Minnesota for the impacts of climate change that cannot be avoided or mitigated.”
Since the passage of President Biden’s landmark climate bill, the Inflation Reduction Act, in 2022, Minnesota has seen $1.15 billion in clean energy investments and nearly 2,000 new clean energy jobs, according to an assessment from the group Climate Power.
But energy is just one component of Walz’s environmental record. The governor has also advocated heavily for transportation projects that will expand the use of electric vehicles, tighten pollution standards for cars and trucks, and enhance public transit and e-bike options.
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Last year, Minnesota became the first state in the Midwest to adopt California’s strict tailpipe emission standards — despite significant opposition from state Republicans and the Minnesota Auto Dealers Assn., who bemoaned in a court petition that “Minnesota is not California.”
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The rule does not go so far as to ban the sale of gas cars, which California will do beginning in 2035. However, Walz has outlined other plans to accelerate Minnesota’s transition to electric vehicles, with his climate framework calling for increased EV charging infrastructure, reduced EV costs and more accessible EV options. The plan seeks to have at least 20% EVs on Minnesota roads by 2030.
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In 2017, he condemned Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement as a move that “weakens U.S. national security, food security, moral/global leadership — and lets down our kids.” (President Biden reentered the agreement on his first day in office).
Walz also didn’t mince words when Trump rolled back a signature Obama-era climate policy known as the Clean Power Plan in 2017 — issuing a statement denouncing the order as denying “the very existence of climate change.”.
“The science on climate change is settled,” Walz said.