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New Mexico Will Embrace Goals To Mitigate Climate Change In The 2015 Paris Agreement

Office of Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham

  Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham on Tuesday formally ordered that New Mexico will join the U.S. Climate Alliance, fully embracing the goals set by the 2015 Paris Agreement, "aligning New Mexico with the U.S. governors and states that have committed to a climate-conscious future and moves to protect people, natural resources and cultural heritage."  Here is a statement from the Governor's office:

 

The governor also ordered the creation of a New Mexico Climate Change Task Force, calling on all state agencies to contribute to a statewide climate strategy and incorporate climate mitigation and adaptation practices into their programs and operations.

 

Lujan Grisham, in an executive order signed Tuesday in the Cabinet Room, directly addressed the need for climate change mitigation and energy waste prevention, emphasizing the state’s responsibility and opportunity to reduce pollution that threatens human health and looms as an unprecedented humanitarian crisis within this lifetime.

 

“Today marks an important shift in direction on climate policy in New Mexico,” Gov. Lujan Grisham said. “We know all too well states cannot rely on the federal government right now to act responsibly and take the bold action scientists have made clear is needed to prevent calamitous climate change fallout in our lifetimes. It’s up to us. And I have full confidence our commitments today will launch our state toward a robust transformation, with results delivered by each state agency to make a cohesive, effective whole.”

 

 

The secretaries of the Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department and Environment Department will co-chair the climate task force, comprised of a secretary or designee from each state agency. The task force will provide strategic direction for achieving a statewide reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, improved air quality, and other measures that will protect New Mexico’s vital natural resources, align with the Paris goals and keep New Mexico within what researchers have described as the upper bound of irreversible CO2 emissions. Those measures include adoption of approaches to reduce greenhouse gas and criteria pollutant emissions from light-duty vehicles sold in New Mexico; adoption of a comprehensive market-based program that sets emission limits across New Mexico; adoption of new building codes; and the identification of transmission corridors needed to transport the state’s renewable electricity.

 

The task force, according to the order, will establish a list of initial recommendations and status updates to the governor no later than Sept. 15. Additionally, state agencies have been ordered to evaluate and implement policies that further achieve reductions in greenhouse gas pollution.

 

EMNRD and NMED, in working with key stakeholders and legislators, will develop and bring forward legislation to increase New Mexico’s renewable portfolio standard and increase the state’s energy efficiency standards for electric utilities.

 

Together, the two departments will also coordinate with the New Mexico State Land Office along with federal bureaus and agencies that manage land and natural resources across the state to advance clean energy priorities wherever possible.

 

In addition, EMNRD and NMED will jointly develop a statewide, enforceable regulatory framework to secure reductions in oil-and-gas sector methane emissions and to prevent waste from new and existing sources.