The gaffe heard around the World (Bank)
Presented by Panasonic
PASSING ON MALPASS — World Bank President David Malpass said five months ago that he "wasn't a scientist." Now he's on his way to not being president of the World Bank, either.
Malpass said Wednesday that he would step down by the end of June. He didn't say why, but everyone assumed it was because of the steady drumbeat of criticism that accumulated after he fumbled the most basic of climate-policy questions at New York City's Climate Week in September.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen — who criticized the bank's work on climate just last week and will play a major role in appointing Malpass' successor — emphasized the turning of the page, Corbin Hiar reports for POLITICO's E&E News.
The United States, the World Bank's largest shareholder, will nominate a successor "who will carry forward the vital work we are undertaking to evolve the multilateral development banks to better meet the challenges of the 21st century," Yellen said in a statement.
"That includes by expanding our capacity to combat climate change, improve public health, and address conflict and fragility in the pursuit of ending poverty and advancing prosperity," she added.
The takeaway: Rhetoric matters — a lot. People already had been criticizing the bank for being relatively slow to stop financing fossil fuels and start financing more clean energy projects in developing countries, but Malpass' gaffe cast the institution in a much dimmer light.
Names to replace him are swirling, Karl Mathiesen and Zack Colman report. Some of the more familiar are U.S. special climate envoy John Kerry, former Vice President Al Gore and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg — all of whom criticized Malpass' handling of climate, Bloomberg as recently as last week.
Others include Minouche Shafik, who recently accepted a job to become Columbia University’s president; Daleep Singh, who was deputy national security adviser for international economics under President Joe Biden; World Trade Organization Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala; and former U.S. Agency for International Development Administrator Raj Shah, who now leads the Rockefeller Foundation.
FLOOD WARNINGS — How much information is too much? Some Indiana homeowners and developers have limited appetite for accurate flood maps, Tom Frank reports for POLITICO's E&E News.
A bill moving through the Indiana Legislature is pitting property values against climate adaptation. It could let local officials ignore the state's flood maps — a change that experts say would undermine Indiana’s innovative use of new flood-mapping technology to reduce damage.
“We are getting a lot of concerns expressed from folks throughout our districts,” the sponsor, state Sen. Jean Leising (R), said at a recent legislative hearing. “None of us want to see anybody build where they’re going to be flooded. But I don’t want to see people’s property devalued.”
Meanwhile, as Tom also reports, Freddie Mac chief economist Sam Khater on Wednesday endorsed giving homebuyers information about the flood risk of prospective properties, saying the policy could drive down prices of some houses.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency is considering requiring states to mandate flood disclosure during real estate sales, though Khater said he wasn't commenting on the FEMA proposal.
TESLA TRUCE — Tesla and the Biden administration seem destined to never be on the same page, politically.
One day after President Joe Biden said he had secured a commitment from Elon Musk’s company to make its massive electric vehicle charging network public, the automaker fired dozens of workers at the factory that makes components for those chargers, Scott Waldman reports for POLITICO's E&E News.
The dismissal of more than 30 employees would appear to be incongruent with the president's efforts to elevate union workers as a pillar of the nation's wide-ranging transition to clean energy. The firings came two days after workers at the Tesla gigafactory in Buffalo, N.Y., said they had begun an effort to unionize in response to poor working conditions.
Discussions between the White House and Musk — a frequent Biden critic — over EV charging were widely seen as a thaw in tensions. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre stopped short of criticizing Musk during a briefing with reporters Thursday, while pointedly defending workers.
REPAIR OR REPLACE — The European Union is mulling rules to make it easier to repair products rather than throw them out and replace them with new ones, but industry is pushing back, Louise Guillot reports.
The European Commission is set to present its long-awaited right-to-repair proposal next month. Regulators want to encourage more repairs than are happening under the current rules, which let consumers choose between having the seller repair or replace a defective product.
Trade groups are arguing that replacement is sometimes more sustainable. “In some cases, replacement and adequate recycling can have a lower environmental footprint and can therefore present an equally viable option,” said Cecilia Bonefeld-Dahl, director general of Digital Europe, a group representing tech companies in Brussels.
Companies are particularly expressing concern that Brussels could choose to mandate that companies must favor repair over replacement within a product’s two-year legal warranty period.
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Source: https://www.politico.com/