Current:Home > Invest'Energy Justice' Nominee Brings Activist Voice To Biden's Climate Plans -VitalWealth Strategies
'Energy Justice' Nominee Brings Activist Voice To Biden's Climate Plans
View
Date:2025-04-12 13:16:16
Capitol Hill lawmakers Tuesday questioned one of President Biden's top picks for the Department of Energy, a woman with a history of activism who will help shape the administration's focus on environmental justice.
Shalanda Baker already works at the department in a newly-created role of Deputy Director for Energy Justice. Her confirmation hearing is for a promotion to become Director of the Office of Minority Economic Impact.
Baker introduced herself by talking about her parents. She says her father grew up next to one of the largest refineries in the world in Port Arthur, Texas, and made a good living in the energy industry. Baker described her mother's home as "energy insecure" and said these experiences will inform her work at the department.
"Like one in three American households, 52.2% of Black American households, and 61.5% of Native American households, we used the oven to warm our apartment in Austin, Texas, where I grew up," Baker told senators on the Energy and Natural Resources Committee.
Baker is a former Air Force officer and a law professor at Northeastern University. She co-founded and co-directed the Initiative for Energy Justice. An Energy Department announcement for her nomination mentions Baker's recent book Revolutionary Power: An Activist's Guide to the Energy Transition, where she "argues that the technical terrain of energy policy should be the next domain to advance civil rights."
At a virtual Earth Day event Baker drew a connection between energy policy and the racial reckoning over the police killing of George Floyd.
"I would suggest to you today that the energy system is not immune from that broader reckoning, and that in many ways, the energy system is complicit in the structural violence that is routinely experienced by people of color in this country," said Baker.
Baker says people of color too often are subject to the downside of energy development — like pollution from burning fossil fuels — and rarely get to experience the upside, such as jobs and owning power plants. Even more unfair, she says, poor communities spend a larger share of their income on energy.
She and other advocates for "energy justice" want to fix these problems through government policy. The emerging field starts with the idea that everyone should have access to safe, affordable, and sustainable energy.
"Energy justice considers the disparities that arise along the entire energy system spectrum — extraction through production, and then also through consumption and waste," says Indiana University Professor Sanya Carley. In other words, she says, it's "planning our energy systems so humans matter."
Baker says that means involving affected people from the start of that planning so they have a voice in the outcome. She talked about this in a recent online interview with celebrity activist Jane Fonda, as they discussed Baker's experience working in Mexico and Hawaii.
"People didn't understand why a law professor was talking to grandmothers and aunts and uncles about energy, and I believed that those voices needed to be heard in the energy policy-making space," said Baker.
The Energy Department declined NPR's request to interview Baker now that she's been nominated to head the Office of Minority Economic Impact.
"It's a unique position with the U.S. Government because it's [a] one-of-a-kind office," says James Campos, who held the position during the Trump administration.
He's critical of how fast the Biden administration wants to transition to cleaner energy. But he says this position is important because of "the growth of the minority communities, the impacts the minority communities will have on our economy, and the need to be inclusive at all levels."
Campos says part of the job is bringing more people of color into the energy business. One way to do that is to make sure more of the billions of research and development dollars DOE allocates make their way to a broader range of colleges.
"There were certain academic institutions that were the ones who received the lion's share," says Mustafa Santiago Ali, who worked at the Environmental Protection Agency for more than two decades and now pursues his environmental justice work at the National Wildlife Federation.
Ali says more federal money should flow to historically black colleges and universities, Hispanic-serving institutions and tribal colleges.
"If we want to grow, both the next set of engineers and scientists and a number of others, then we have to be investing in the infrastructure that would exist inside of those entities," says Ali.
The Biden administration's Justice40 Initiative sets a goal for 40 percent of benefits from federal money spent on climate change to reach disadvantaged communities. If Shalanda Baker is confirmed by the Senate part of her job will be to make that happen.
veryGood! (134)
Related
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Vehicle crashes on NJ parkway; the driver dies in a shootout with police while 1 officer is wounded
- Google settles $5 billion privacy lawsuit over tracking people using 'incognito mode'
- 'In shock': Mississippi hunter bags dwarf deer with record-sized antlers
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- A tumultuous last 2023 swing through New Hampshire for Nikki Haley
- Ice-fishing 'bus' crashes through ice on Minnesota lake, killing 1 man
- Court in Canadian province blocks new laws against public use of illegal substances
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
- Why do we sing 'Auld Lang Syne' at the stroke of midnight? The New Year's song explained
Ranking
- Sonya Massey's family keeps eyes on 'full justice' one month after shooting
- Matthew McConaughey shares rare photo of son Livingston: 'We love watching you grow'
- Mexico and Venezuela restart repatriation flights amid pressure to curb soaring migration to U.S.
- Prosecutors say there’s no need for a second trial of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- How Dickens did it: 'A Christmas Carol' debuted 180 years ago, and won hearts instantly
- Ellen Pompeo marks return as Meredith Grey in 'Grey's Anatomy' Season 20 teaser
- A 14-year-old boy is arrested on suspicion of killing parents, wounding sister in California attack
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Migrant crossings at U.S. southern border reach record monthly high in December
Prosecutors urge appeals court to reject Trump’s immunity claims in election subversion case
Family found dead in sprawling mansion outside Boston in 'deadly incident of domestic violence'
New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
Paula Abdul accuses 'American Idol' producer of sexual assault
Sheriff’s deputy fatally shot in standoff at home in Georgia
Activists who engage with voters of color are looking for messages that will resonate in 2024