Gina McCarthy accepts nomination for first-ever national climate adviser
Former E.P.A. chief Gina McCarthy accepted her nomination as the first-ever national climate advisor to head the new White House Office of Domestic Climate Policy.
"I'm here today because climate change is not only a threat to the planet. It is a threat to our health and our well-being," McCarthy said. "It's a threat to people everywhere and the precious natural resources that we depend on."
Defeating this threat, she went on, "will require engagement of every community, every sector in our nation and every country in the world."
In the role, she said she will work directly with communities and harness "the force of science and the values of environmental justice."
Biden referred to McCarthy, who currently serves as president and CEO of the Natural Resources Defense Council, as a "policy wonk and a people person, problem solver and coalition builder."
While E.P.A. head under the Obama-Biden administration, she led the effort of lowering carbon emissions from power plants and conserving critical water sources, he said.
McCarthy will work closely with former Secretary of State John Kerry in the new role, Biden said.