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Election 08

Biden on the Issues

A look at Joe Biden's environmental platform and record


29 Aug 2007
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Update: Joe Biden dropped out of the presidential race on Jan. 3, 2008.

Joe Biden
Joe Biden.
Photo: senate.gov
Democratic presidential contender Joe Biden has earned an 84 percent lifetime score from the League of Conservation Voters during his 34 years representing Delaware in the U.S. Senate, voting fairly consistently with environmentalists and the mainstream of his party. He has said that "energy security" is his top priority, and argues that he's well-suited to deal with the challenge thanks to years of experience on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, which he now chairs. Biden is also a big booster of biofuels.


Read an interview with Joe Biden by Grist and Outside.

Key Points


  • Primary cosponsor of a "Sense of the Senate" resolution calling on the U.S. to participate in U.N. climate negotiations. He introduced it with Sen. Richard Lugar (R-Ind.) in the current Congress and the previous one.

  • Cosponsor of the Boxer-Sanders Global Warming Pollution Reduction Act, the most stringent climate bill in the Senate. It would establish a cap-and-trade system for greenhouse-gas emissions and require the U.S. to reduce its emissions to 1990 levels by 2020, and to 80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050. Biden became a cosponsor of it more than three months after it was introduced and just days after both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama signed on.

  • Calls for raising fuel-economy standards for automobiles to an average of 40 miles per gallon by 2017 by increasing fuel-economy targets within vehicle classes by about one mile per gallon per year.

  • Would increase ethanol and biodiesel production by upping the national renewable-fuel standard to require that the fuel supply include 10 billion gallons of renewable fuel a year by 2010 and 60 billion gallons a year by 2030.

  • Calls for 20 percent of the U.S. electricity supply to come from renewable sources.

Video & Audio


Watch Biden ask: What are you willing to do to break our dependence on oil?




Watch Biden answer a question about biofuels at a campaign event in New Hampshire:




Watch Biden answer a question about moving toward renewable energy at a July 20, 2007, campaign event in Iowa:




Watch Biden explain what he would do as president to address global warming at a March 3, 2007, rally in South Carolina:




Listen to a clip of Biden's interview with Grist and Outside:



Quotable Quotes


  • "If I could wave a wand, and the Lord said I could solve one problem, I would solve the energy crisis. That's the single most consequential problem we can solve. It's what you have to do to get greenhouse gases under control."
    -- March 3, 2007, at a rally in Hartsville, S.C.


  • "I personally believe that the single most important step we can take to resume a leadership role in international climate-change efforts would be to make real progress toward a domestic emissions-reduction regime. For too long we have abdicated the responsibility to reduce our own emissions, the largest single source of the problem we face today. We have the world's largest economy, with the highest per-capita emissions. Rather than leading by example, we have retreated from international negotiations."
    -- Jan. 30, 2007, in a statement given before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee


Platform & Record In-Depth


  • Sponsor of FLIP-to-SAVE bill (clever acronym alert! FLIP to SAVE = Fluorescent Lightbulb Implementation Program to Save Americans Value and Energy), which would provide $50 million in grants to states to distribute compact fluorescent light bulbs and educate people about them, giving priority to low-income households.

  • Cosponsor of the bipartisan Fuel Economy Reform Act, which would raise vehicle fuel-efficiency standards by 4 percent, or approximately one mile per gallon, each year. The measure includes tax incentives to help automakers retool their factories toward this goal. The bill also includes a provision that would let the Department of Transportation revise the annual targets if it determined that the planned increases were not safe, cost-effective, or technologically possible.

  • Sponsor of the American Automobile Industry Promotion Act of 2007, which would support research and development of electric car motors and batteries and would define the term biodiesel to include diesel fuel made from municipal solid waste, animal waste, sludge, and oil derived from wastewater or the treatment of wastewater.

  • Sees a potential role for nuclear energy, but says the problem of how to store nuclear waste needs to be dealt with. Says he would invest heavily in finding a safe storage solution and developing ways to reconfigure spent fuel into reusable fuel

  • Proposes requiring that all cars marketed in the U.S. be flex-fuel capable by 2017.

  • Would require major gas stations to add more biofuel pumps.

  • Proposes requiring the federal government to get 10 percent of its electricity from renewable sources by 2010 and gradually increase to 20 percent after that.

  • To promote energy efficiency, wants to expand the Energy Star program to include more appliances and commercial systems, update building codes to promote efficiency, and increase incentives for more efficient commercial buildings and manufacturing systems.

  • Calls for the U.S. to spend $100 million a year on research and development of lithium-ion batteries, which could be used in plug-in hybrids.

  • Wants to reinstate Superfund's "polluter pays" fees -- a tax on chemical and oil companies that goes to pay for cleanup of toxic sites around the U.S.

  • Opposes oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

  • Voted against the final version of the 2005 Energy Policy Act, a sweeping, oil-friendly energy bill opposed by enviros. The act passed, and Bush signed it into law in August 2005.

  • Cosponsored the Clean Power Act of 2005, which would have implemented a cap-and-trade system for carbon dioxide and other pollutants.

  • In 2003, voted against an amendment to increase fuel-economy standards for passenger cars to 40 mpg by 2014.

  • In 2002, voted against storing nuclear waste at the Yucca Mountain repository now being built in southern Nevada.

  • Cosponsored legislation in 2001 and again in 2004 to renew a debt-for-nature program that allows some debt owed to the U.S. to be put into forest conservation funds.

Still Haven't Gotten Enough?


What did we miss? Tell us below in comments. We'll update this page as the presidential campaign continues.


Todd Hymas Samkara and Kate Sheppard contributed to this fact sheet.

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Comments: (3 comments)

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Great guy. Deadbang loser.

The Democratic Party has had an abundance of opportunities to run Joe Biden for President.  It hasn't come close.  He has great qualifications, more experience than anyone in the race and a sound environmental platform and record.  But he shows zero signs of changing his chronic position as an also-ran. (And there is the weird incident when he  plagiarized a Labor Party MP's speech verbatim.)

If Clinton, Obama, Edwards & Bill R Stumble

Biden's the man.

reply to daved...

Actually you are incorrect in one of your statements; thought'd I'd set the record straight.  I found three mentions that the "word for word plagiarism" charge was fabricated.  Here is the first link via The Washington Post

In the Sep. 13, 2006 Washington Post:
"Democratic Forces Salve Wounds"
By Dan Balz
...."It was all reminiscent of the 1988 presidential campaign, when then-Massachusetts Gov. Michael S. Dukakis (D) admitted that his campaign manager had leaked a tape damaging to Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. (D-Del.) to the New York Times. His campaign manager, John Sasso, was forced to resign."  Here is the link to the story:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/...

Biden gave a speech in 1987, quoted a British politician with one attribution, at the beginning of the speech.  He continued speaking, and didn't give other references to the source.  

But someone else running for President that year was Michael Dukakis from Massachusetts.  His campaign manager, John Sasso, wrote a memo to the press, showing them the portions of Biden's remarks on tape, during the last part of the speech, telling the press that Joe lifted whole portions of his speech from one written by a British politician, accusing him of plagiarism.  And not showing them the part on the tape where he DID give the attribution.

Sasso sent them the edited videos, where you can hear Joe giving quotes.   The press ran with that story, but really it was not a case of plagiarism. A week later when the truth came out, Dukakis said he'd fire whoever it was on his staff wrote that untruthful memo, but then Sasso resigned instead.

Second mention:

The Washington Post also published a news piece in 1987, right after the memo/video thing happened.  It was written by Tom Edsall. Their archived articles cost money, but the WaPo site does offer a few free paragraphs:

"Dukakis Disputes Report On Origin of Biden Tape
While Staff Reportedly Compiled Clips to Hurt Rival"
[FINAL Edition]
The Washington Post, Washington, D.C.  
Author: Thomas B. Edsall
Date: Sep 29, 1987

Start Page: a.06
Section: A SECTION
Text Word Count: 511

"At a news conference in Boston, Michael S. Dukakis said he would be 'astonished' and 'very angry' if it were proven that any of his campaign staff assembled a tape comparing a Joseph R. Biden Jr. speech with an earlier speech by British Labor Party candidate Neil Kinnock.

In Iowa , Dukakis' state campaign director, Teresa Vilmain, claimed 'I have no knowledge' of any campaign involvement in the videotape.  United Press International quoted Paul Tully, Dukakis' political director, as stating flatly: 'It was not our people in Iowa.'

Five years ago, in the 1982 Massachusetts gubernatorial contest, the Dukakis campaign became involved in another controversy when it was disclosed that John Sasso had privately played a derogatory tape on an off-the-record basis for two Boston Globe reporters. The tape was a parody of a commercial produced by Ed King, Dukakis' opponent in the 1982 election....."

Third mention:

On MSNBC's "Countdown" Keith Olbermann reported on this same research and exhonorated Biden for any plagiarism labels. I find Olbermann to be one of the most honest, credible newsmen on the air today.  

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