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From left to right, Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-Menlo Park), Gov. Gavin Newsom, President Joe Biden and California Climate Action Corps fellow Chiena Ty tour the Palo Alto Baylands on June 19, 2023. Courtesy the office of Gov. Newsom.

President Joe Biden announced that his administration is investing more than $2.6 billion to fight climate change and to help communities become resilient during a stop at the Lucy Evans Baylands Nature Interpretive Center and Preserve in Palo Alto on Monday, June 19.

Standing outside amid blustery winds, Biden announced the latest funding: nearly $600M for climate resilience through the launch of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s “Climate Resilience Regional Challenge,” and $2 billion for building the electrical grid, a move that would also create jobs, he said.

Biden arrived by motorcade at the Baylands at about 1 p.m. after landing on Air Force One at Moffett Federal Field. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, U.S. Rep. Anna Eshoo, Santa Clara County Supervisor Susan Ellenberg and Eugene Tu, center director of NASA Ames Research Center, greeted him at the airport, according to the publication The Hill.

At the interpretive center, he viewed the Safer Bay Project salt-marsh-preservation program. The San Francisquito Creek Joint Powers Authority spearheads the project, which aims to protect people, property and infrastructure from flooding from Bay tides and projected sea level rise.

“Starting tomorrow the Department of Commerce will launch the first, largest competitive climate resilience … challenge to provide $600 million to coastal and Great Lake communities that are building projects to protect against the impacts of climate change from sea level rise, flooding and storm surge, we’re investing in the people in places that haven’t been hit the hardest, but who are also on the frontlines,” Biden said during a live-streamed press conference.

The Department of Defense is also going to announce that it’s investing more than $2 billion to modernize the nation’s electric grid to be more climate resilient, including more than $67 million in California.

“That funding can help ensure our electric grid is stronger, that the lights and air conditioning and internet stay on during heat waves and storms and other climate events. So the lights can stay on in hospital operating rooms, nursing homes, and so many other critical care facilities,” he said.

Later this year, the White House is hosting the first ever White House Summit, which will convene local, state, tribal and territorial leaders focused on climate resilience.

“It’s going to include a roadmap for how these historic climate actions are going to build more climate resilient communities all across America, saving lives at home, providing peace of mind,” Biden said.

Newsom also spoke at the event, addressing the state’s efforts to promote renewable energy and to combat the dangers of climate change, which has resulted in catastrophic wildfires, drought and, this year, flooding.

“We have in California (nearly) six times more clean energy jobs than we do fossil fuel jobs,” Newsom said. “California has produced roughly one out of every four clean energy jobs in America – 27%. … And we’re proving we can do it and grow our economy.” .

The state’s commitment to reaching climate goals

California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks ahead of President Joe Biden at the Baylands Nature preserve on June 19, 2023. Courtesy Josh Becker.

California Sen. Josh Becker, who joined Biden on a tour of the nature preserve, lauded the announcement that the Biden administration would provide the $67 million to California almost immediately. He noted the importance of funding for local projects such as the Pacific Gas & Electric substation in the Baylands, which is vulnerable to sea-level rise.

Becker, chairman of the Senate Budget Subcommittee on Resources, Environmental Protection and Energy, said this year alone, California is dedicating significant funds to meet the state’s climate goals: $125 million for regional climate resilience, $102 million of which is being restored by the Legislature’s Joint Budget Agreement; $384 million for coastal resilience and local sea level rise adaptation, $12.5 million of which comes from cap-and-trade funds; $80 million and $38 million from last year’s budget towards sea level rise; and $65 million from California Department of Fish and Wildlife habitat climate resilience.

Yet, the state is going to need much more funding over time to address climate change, he said.

“We built about eight gigawatts of renewables and storage last year. We need to do that every year for the next 21 years to meet our clean energy 2045 goals,” Becker said.

He called the $2 billion commitment for electrical grid expansion, “an exciting development from the federal government.”

“What we’ve seen in the Inflation Reduction Act and the Infrastructure Act are historic,” he said. “What the Biden-Harris administration has done, they’ve unleashed just a tremendous amount of funding for our clean energy transition. And, again, that’s around all renewables: that’s around solar wind, offshore wind, onshore wind, geothermal – and transmission.

“Overall, at a national level, there’s $400 billion in loans available. And even just if we just got our proportional share, that would be about $80 billion for California. And hopefully, we can get more than that,” Becker said. “Our effort is to achieve 100% clean electricity here and in California and we are already further along (than other parts of the country), but we’re also a huge state.”

The sun sets on the pole field at Byxbee Park and the Lucy Evans Baylands Nature Interpretive Center at the Palo Alto Baylands on February 20, 2015. Photo by Veronica Weber.

Seth Schalet, chief executive officer of the Santa Clara County FireSafe Council, said that the $600 million does not include direct funding for fire resiliency projects. However, the original Infrastructure Bill did provide significant funding for wildfire resiliency, improved wages and benefits for federal firefighters.

The $600 million will help reduce impacts of weather, including wildfire, he said. Improving the grid infrastructure and electrical equipment could also reduce electrical-equipment-caused wildfires.

“Many of the most destructive and deadly wildfires in the state have been tied to the electrical grid,” he said.

Biden’s Palo Alto stop came on the first day of a three-day trip to California that includes two campaign-fundraising events planned for Monday: an event in Los Gatos and one in Atherton at the home of venture capitalist Steve Westly and philanthropist Anita Yu, which will take place this evening.

While in Silicon Valley, Biden may also make an announcement about artificial intelligence. Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre indicated as much to pool reporters during Biden’s flight on Air Force One, according to the White House.

Watch a video of President Joe Biden’s remarks, recorded at the Baylands on June 19, 2023.

Sue Dremann is a veteran journalist who joined the Palo Alto Weekly in 2001. She is an award-winning breaking news and general assignment reporter who also covers the regional environmental, health and...

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4 Comments

  1. It looks like the bad parking for the Interpretive Center and no space made for a poor choice for both the President and the media. At least “The Beast” could drop him right beside the venue for him to make his speech and the media had plenty of space to set up!

    If the media looked over his shoulder the Google campus as well as Shoreline Amphitheater could have been seen. No windsurfers there today, but it was windy!

  2. It is an honor for our city to be a venue the President and our Governor for announcing ambitious climate and resilience programs. While we are often deep in the weeds of resolving climate initiatives here in town, and other important challenges of running our city, lets reflect on how this moment shines a positive light on Palo Alto. I am certain the city staff, including our police, worked hard and fast in order to allow this moment to occur!

  3. The last time I was at the Interpretive Center it was closed on a weekend mid day.

    Had a good laugh seeing the politicos walking along the platform and then hearing them talk about what has been driving inflation the past 2.5 years – Inflation Reduction Act and the Infrastructure Act. Both were pet projects of the party in power and not for the regeneration of our power grids down to the last mile. Aunt Nancy already sent her nephew $49B last year to bail him out.

    Perhaps someone that can add remind Newsom that new nuclear power plants have not been built. Instead, there are solar panels and windmills which even with the small number of electric cars in the state, our governor had to request we not charge them last summer as the grid cannot handle it.

    And the military is supposed to use its funding for this? Interesting as they have crucial needs the administration has not allocated the necessary funding to address.

    There are 4,000 + power grids in the US with California in the bottom quartile due to quality, using the wrong technologies and our politicians spending money in the wrong places.

    How to address these matters? We need smarter & better elected officials at the local, state, federal levels.

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