Climate

How the Inflation Reduction Act Will Affect U.S. Emissions

The Inflation Reduction Act, a $430 billion bill passed by the Senate on Sunday, designed to combat climate change, lower prescription drug costs and raise some corporate taxes. While President Biden last month asserted that it is “far from perfect” and a “compromise”, he also urged Congress to act since it is "how progress is made" and "the strongest bill you can pass."

Indeed, after months of negotiations and numerous amendments made in order to get the bill through, what began life as part of the perhaps overly ambitious Build Back Better plan is expected to fall considerably short of the administration’s emissions goal of reaching 50 percent of the 2005 level by 2030.

As this infographic using Rapid Energy Policy Evaluation and Analysis Toolkit (REPEAT) estimates shows, while annual net greenhouse gas emissions are forecast to be significantly lower by 2030 than they would be if the country’s current policies were maintained, the target is still well out of reach. REPEAT expects emissions to come closer to the desired level by 2035.

Still, the scale of the bill is not to be underrated. Should it pass the House (with voting expected as soon as Friday), it would authorize around $370 billion for energy and climate programs – making it the biggest clean energy investment by the federal government in U.S. history.

Description

This chart shows the annual change in net U.S. GHG emissions due to the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 relative to current policy scenario.

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Global greenhouse gas emissions 1970-2023
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Global greenhouse gas emissions in selected countries 2000-2023
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Greenhouse gas emissions of the chemical industry in the European Union 1990-2021
Net greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S. 1990-2022
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Annual greenhouse gas emissions Japan FY 2000-2022
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Greenhouse gas emissions in Scotland 1990-2022

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