Earth Day, 2021

Published date27 April 2021
Citation86 FR 22105
Record Number2021-08835
SectionPresidential Documents
CourtExecutive Office Of The President
Federal Register, Volume 86 Issue 79 (Tuesday, April 27, 2021)
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 79 (Tuesday, April 27, 2021)]
                [Presidential Documents]
                [Pages 22105-22106]
                From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
                [FR Doc No: 2021-08835] Presidential Documents
                Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 79 / Tuesday, April 27, 2021 /
                Presidential Documents
                ___________________________________________________________________
                Title 3--
                The President
                [[Page 22105]]
                 Proclamation 10186 of April 22, 2021
                
                Earth Day, 2021
                 By the President of the United States of America
                 A Proclamation
                 On April 22, 1970, millions of Americans rallied
                 together to protect the right of all of us to live free
                 from environmental hazard and harm. On that first Earth
                 Day, they gathered all across America--on college
                 campuses, in public parks, and State capitals--
                 galvanized by a vision of a healthier, more prosperous
                 Nation where all people could thrive. Their untiring
                 spirit sparked a national movement for environmental
                 protection that endures today in the bedrock laws that
                 protect the air we breathe, the water we drink, and
                 treasured wild places and wildlife.
                 Earth Day was primarily conceived and brought to life
                 by a dedicated public servant: the late Senator Gaylord
                 Nelson of Wisconsin. Senator Nelson and his wife,
                 Carrie Lee--who herself passed away just last month--
                 were both dear friends who changed my life; it was
                 Senator Nelson who helped persuade me to remain in the
                 Senate after losing my first wife and daughter in a car
                 accident in 1972. Senator Nelson changed the world,
                 too, by building a legacy of environmental protection
                 through Earth Day and all of the progress that has come
                 in its wake--not because it was popular, but because it
                 was the right thing to do for our children and
                 grandchildren.
                 Over half a century later, that legacy lives on in the
                 chorus of courageous young people across the world who
                 are rising up to demand action on climate change. They
                 recognize the enormous economic opportunity to build a
                 brighter, more prosperous future, and the dire
                 economic, societal, and national security consequences
                 of failing to act. Our youth remind us that a better
                 world is within our grasp. Today, I say to young people
                 fighting for a brighter future: We hear you. We see
                 you. We will not let you down.
                 In recent years, climate change has upended the lives
                 of millions of Americans. Record cold weather knocked
                 out the electric grid in Texas this winter, killing at
                 least 111 people and disrupting the lives and
                 livelihoods of millions more. Wildfires tore through
                 more than 5 million acres across the American West--an
                 area roughly the size of the entire State of New Jersey
                 burned to the ground. Last year, back-to-back
                 hurricanes and powerful tropical storms battered the
                 Gulf and East Coasts in the worst Atlantic hurricane
                 season in recorded history. Record floods, hurricane-
                 speed windstorms, and severe droughts devastated
                 families and communities across the Midwest. People
                 have lost homes and irreplaceable memories of their
                 loved ones, small businesses built from years of
                 tireless labor and sacrifice, farmland meant to be
                 passed on to the next generation, and so much more.
                 At the same time, Black, Latino, Indigenous, and other
                 communities of color continue to be hit hardest by the
                 impacts of climate change. They bear the highest burden
                 of pollution, face higher rates of heart and lung
                 disease, are least likely to have safe drinking water
                 in their homes, and suffer increased risk of death from
                 COVID-19. These communities have also frequently been
                 shut out of government decisions that directly bear on
                 their interests. We have an obligation to correct these
                 historic wrongs and to build a future where all people
                 have clean air to breathe, clean water to drink,
                 healthy communities in which they can live, work, and
                 learn, and a meaningful voice in their future.
                [[Page 22106]]
                 That is why my Administration is advancing the most
                 ambitious climate agenda in our Nation's history. Our
                 clean energy plan will create millions of good-paying
                 union jobs, ensure our economic competitiveness, and
                 improve the health and security of communities across
                 America. By making those investments and putting
                 millions of Americans to work, the United States will
                 be able to cut our greenhouse gas emissions in half by
                 2030.
                 Our success in confronting the climate crisis will not
                 be ours alone. It will be shaped, bolstered, and
                 ultimately won by a united pledge from global leaders
                 to set the world on a path to a clean energy future.
                 Today, on the fifth anniversary of the United States
                 ratifying the Paris Agreement, we have brought nations
                 from across the world together to meet the moment and
                 raise our climate ambitions.
                 More than 50 years ago, a generation rallied to
                 confront the environmental crises they faced. They took
                 action in hopes that those in power would listen.
                 Today, a new generation is sounding the alarm louder
                 than ever, demanding that world leaders act. It is in
                 all our interests to rise to that challenge and let our
                 legacy be one of action.
                 NOW, THEREFORE, I, JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR., President of
                 the United States of America, by virtue of the
                 authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws
                 of the United States, do hereby proclaim April 22,
                 2021, as Earth Day. I encourage all Americans to engage
                 in programs and activities that will promote an
                 understanding of environmental protection, the urgency
                 of climate change, and the need to create a healthier,
                 safer, more equitable future for all people.
                 IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this
                 twenty-second day of April, in the year of our Lord two
                 thousand twenty-one, and of the Independence of the
                 United States of America the two hundred and forty-
                 fifth.
                
                
                 (Presidential Sig.)
                [FR Doc. 2021-08835
                Filed 4-26-21; 8:45 am]
                Billing code 3295-F1-P
                

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