[Congressional Record Volume 167, Number 109 (Wednesday, June 23, 2021)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4709-S4710]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                             CLIMATE CHANGE

  Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, what is the weather like in Las Vegas? 
What is it like in Reno? I am not sure, but I will bet it is hot. And 
the reason I am sure that it is likely to be hot is the weather 
forecast.
  I looked at that map, and it was solid red in the western half of the 
United States, with extreme high temperatures at a level never 
recorded. They said in the city of Seattle, there have only been a 
handful of times that they have had temperatures over 100 degrees in 
that city. It is going to happen again this weekend, at least that is 
the prediction. That is the weather forecast.
  It is not just confined to the blue coastal States, as some call 
them. We have a drought in the Midwest. I hope it ends soon, but when 
it comes to corn country--Iowa, Illinois, Indiana--we are worried. I 
hope it doesn't happen, but it could, and we know it can happen soon. 
And then in the southeastern part of the United States, there are 
extreme storms--rains they haven't seen before.
  I just say that after listening to the Republican leader describe the 
situation with the environment, wondering if he reads the papers or 
talks to people back home because extreme weather is happening all over 
the United States, and it isn't just in Republican areas or Democratic 
areas; it is virtually everywhere.
  So when President Biden comes in and says: Shouldn't we do something 
about this for the good of our children and our grandchildren? 
Shouldn't we be willing to sacrifice a little bit? Shouldn't we be 
willing to change some if it means that they are going to have a planet 
that is worth living on--about 10 years ago, I started asking my 
farmers who come and visit me from Illinois a couple of questions. 
These are good people. They never vote for me, I know that, but I still 
like meeting with them. They are good people. They bring their wives. 
They dress up in their suits. They take it seriously. They are coming 
to Washington. This is before COVID-19, of course. And they would sit 
upstairs in my conference room. There would be about 20 or 30 of them 
from organizations like the Farm Bureau or the corn growers or the 
soybean growers. And I would say to them--this is 10 years ago--how 
many of you believe that what we are doing on Earth is changing the 
environment of the Earth we live on? I mean that our human activity is 
having something to do with it. And I would ask for a show of hands. 
And the response was, not one hand would go up.
  And I finally said to them: Well, things are changing. What do you 
think is behind all of it? And one fellow said--and he did this 
seriously, and I believe he was speaking from the heart--he said: 
``Senator, some years God sends me a drought; some years God sends me a 
flood; I got to deal with whatever God sends me.''
  I respect him for that. That is his deep-hearted belief, and it is 
sincere.
  But I think there is more to the story. And now when I ask these same 
farmers the same question, I get a different response. The Illinois 
corn growers, looking around, thinking something is happening here in 
this wonderful, bountiful State that I live in. The crops that are 
grown traditionally are not producing what they did traditionally, 
unless some hybrid seeds and other fertilizers are being used. There

[[Page S4710]]

are new weather conditions and it is changing every year and it is not 
getting better. It is getting dryer and hotter.
  So when Joe Biden starts talking about the next generation of energy 
in America, I think about my granddaughter, ``Little Jo.'' I think 
about Jo, and I am wondering what kind of world she is going to live in 
and what I am going to do about it.
  One thing that President Biden said was, we are moving toward 
electric vehicles. You would think that it was some Federal mandate 
that is bringing this on. But if you read the newspapers, you know it 
isn't. General Motors has accelerated the timetable to go to electric 
vehicles, Ford as well. They see the writing on the wall.
  What we currently use for transportation will not be what we use in 
10 or 15 years. It is going to change. We are going to move to electric 
vehicles for a variety of reasons, not the least of which is there are 
fewer emissions, greenhouse gas emissions.
  The country of Norway just announced last week that over 50 percent 
of their vehicles are electric vehicles. If you had been there in the 
recent past, you see Teslas in every direction, electric vehicles in 
every direction.
  I spoke to the Ambassador from Norway, and I said: How did that 
happen? How did you move to a point where more than half the vehicles 
in Norway are electric vehicles?
  She said: Tax breaks. We gave them tax breaks. And all of a sudden, 
everyone had a new lifestyle with electric vehicles. And they think 
that protects them in the future or at least holds the possibility of 
reducing the pollution that they are dealing with, and I think they are 
right. So does Joe Biden. But when we get into an infrastructure debate 
with Republicans, the first thing they say is: Take electric vehicles 
off the table. We don't want to even talk about it. No subsidies, no 
encouragement for those.

  Traditionally, we have been encouraging oil companies, with all sorts 
of tax breaks throughout their history, to continue to explore and grow 
in size and make a lot of money. But the notion of encouraging electric 
vehicles is somehow heretical to our friends on the Republican side. I 
think it is very shortsighted.
  I think we should look at the obvious. I tell this story, and it is 
worth repeating. Six years ago, we had an auto plant in Normal, IL--
yes, that is the name of it: Normal, IL. Six years ago, Mitsubishi 
closed their auto plant. There were more than 1,000 people working 
there, and there was that big sprawling complex just off of Interstate 
55. Every time you took that interstate and looked out there, you 
thought: That is going to be there forever. That building is just going 
to deteriorate and be there forever.
  Well, guess what. A year after they closed, the mayor of Normal, IL, 
whose name is Chris Koos--a wonderful mayor--called me and said: 
Senator, I think I have a buyer for the Mitsubishi plant.
  I said: What kind of buyer?
  He said: There is a man who wants to build electric vehicles. He came 
down and took a look, and he liked that plant. He said it was way too 
big for his purposes, but he is actually thinking of building electric 
vehicles in the old Mitsubishi plant.
  Darned if it didn't happen. The company is called Rivian. They bought 
that plant, and they started building electric vehicles--just this 
month, officially, in production.
  How many workers will they have? Up to 4,000, maybe even 5,000. Will 
they be able to use the whole plant? They are now building an addition 
to the plant. Is it a viable company? Is it going to last? Well, 
obviously Amazon thinks so because they have invested a billion dollars 
in Rivian. And the companies are coming from all around thinking this 
is the future.
  So I say to the Senator from Kentucky, yes, there will be transitions 
in jobs, but there are job opportunities at Rivian and places just like 
that. Lion Electric is another company. It came in from Canada. They 
build electric buses. One of the things we are envisioning is moving 
toward electric schoolbuses across America. That is a big move. This is 
a company that builds them.
  We need more just like it, and there are going to be good-paying jobs 
associated with it.
  EVBox is a company out of the Netherlands, located in my State again. 
They build the charging stations.
  Closing your eyes to the opportunities here is very shortsighted. 
Things are changing, and changing for the better. And because there is 
change, it doesn't mean it is bad for everybody. There are transitions, 
and we ought to help with educating people, preparing them for the new 
jobs.
  But if you look around at this world and what is happening with the 
weather patterns and the environment, how shortsighted it would be for 
us to say to our kids and grandkids: Well, we had a chance back in 2021 
to do something about it, but we decided it just might make people 
uneasy to think about that much change.
  Well, I feel uneasy about the change that is coming if we do nothing. 
It is going to be a dramatic change for the worse for our kids.

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