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Biden marks his climate legacy during Amazon visit, asserting 'nobody' can reverse it

President Biden tours the Museu da Amazonia, a rainforest preserve in Manaus, Brazil, on Nov. 17, 2024, before heading to Rio de Janeiro for the G20 Summit.
Saul Loeb
/
AFP
President Biden tours the Museu da Amazonia, a rainforest preserve in Manaus, Brazil, on Nov. 17, 2024, before heading to Rio de Janeiro for the G20 Summit.

MANAUS, Brazil — President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to President Biden's clean energy incentives when he takes office in January. But on Sunday, Biden used a trip to the Amazon to defiantly assert that his could not be easily reversed.

"Some may seek to deny or delay the clean energy revolution that's underway in America, but nobody — nobody — can reverse it. Nobody," Biden said in remarks from a rainforest preserve.

Biden is the first sitting U.S. president to visit the Amazon, a quick stop that was meant as a capstone for his work on climate, made he is attending in South America.

President Biden flies over the Amazon in his Marine One helicopter during his visit to Manaus, Brazil, on Nov. 17, 2024.
Saul Loeb / AFP
/
AFP
President Biden flies over the Amazon in his Marine One helicopter during his visit to Manaus, Brazil, on Nov. 17, 2024.

He took an aerial tour of a region that has been through , and looked at areas where trees had been illegally harvested. Then, he walked along a dirt path through the edge of the rainforest, meeting with indigenous leaders and Nobel laureate Dr. Carlos Nobre, who studies how climate change affects the Amazon.

Noting that he is about to leave office, Biden checked off his climate accomplishments, noting that his clean energy investments could help the United States cut carbon emissions in half by 2030.

"I will leave my successor and my country the strong foundation to build on, if they choose to do so," he said, arguing that clean energy investments were helping create jobs. "The question now is, which government will stand in the way and which will seize the enormous economic opportunity?"

President Biden walks through a preserve on the edge of the Amazon rainforest in Manaus, Brazil, on Nov. 17, 2024.
Saul Loeb / AFP
/
AFP
President Biden walks through a preserve on the edge of the Amazon rainforest in Manaus, Brazil, on Nov. 17, 2024.

Trump left the Paris accord. Biden rejoined it. Now, Trump is poised to quit it again.

On Biden's first day in office, he signed an order for the United States to to limit greenhouse gas emissions. Trump had withdrawn from the accord when he first took office in 2017 — and he has promised to leave it again when he takes office in January.

Trump has vowed to gut the , Biden's landmark climate legislation that contains the largest federal clean energy investment in U.S. history.

The White House has been working to try to get funding, initiatives and regulations on the books before Biden leaves, anticipating the changes ahead.

On Sunday, Biden said he had fulfilled a pledge to increase international climate aid to $11 billion. He met with officials from Mombak Gestora de Recursos, a company replanting trees with investments from big tech companies like Microsoft, which get carbon reduction emission credits, in exchange. The U.S. government is giving Mombak a $37.5 million loan for its project.

And he announced $50 million for Brazil's , bringing the total U.S. contribution to $100 million. Biden last year had pledged $500 million to the fund over five years.

Asked about the likelihood of the incoming Trump administration fulfilling the rest of that pledge, a senior U.S. official told reporters traveling with Biden: "Who knows? Maybe he'll come down here and see the forest and see the damage being done from the drought and other things and change his mind about climate change."

Copyright 2024 NPR

Asma Khalid is a White House correspondent for NPR. She also co-hosts The NPR Politics Podcast.

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