Secretary's Remarks: Announcement of Appointment of Special Envoy for Climate Change
Mon, 26 Jan 2009 13:32:06 -0600
Secretary Clinton Announces Appointment of Special Envoy for Climate Change Todd Stern
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Ben Franklin Room
Washington, DC
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you. Thank you very much. Well, welcome to the State Department, but really, many of you work
here and work at USAID and do the important business of our country, and I’m so pleased that you could join us today,
because it is with great enthusiasm that I am naming today a Special Envoy for Climate Change.
As should be evident by now, the President and I believe that American leadership is essential to meeting the challenges
of the 21st century. And chief among those is the complex, urgent, and global threat of climate change. From rapidly
rising temperatures to melting arctic icecaps, from lower crop yields to dying forests, from unforgiving hurricanes to
unrelenting droughts, we have no shortage of evidence that our world is facing a climate crisis.
And let’s be clear. A world in crisis goes well beyond the air we breathe, the food we eat, the water we drink. It is at
once an environmental, economic, energy and national security issue with grave implications for America’s and the
world’s future. A quick scan of the globe vividly conveys the human toll. Competition for scarcer resources like food
and water will lead to further migrations of populations, regional conflicts, and greater disparities between the rich
and poor. Reliance on foreign sources of oil and gas influence our way of life here at home and continues to compromise
our national security.
So the urgency of the global climate crisis must not be underestimated, nor should the science behind it or the facts on
the ground be ignored or dismissed. The time for realism and action is now. And President Obama and I recognize that the
solutions to this crisis are both domestic and global, that all nations bear responsibility and all nations must work
together to find solutions. Under President Obama, America will take the lead in addressing this challenge, both by
making commitments of our own and engaging other nations to do the same.
On the domestic side, we are beginning immediately to enact measures that will lead to lower greenhouse gas emissions
and to make new and significant investments in clean energy technology and a new green economy. Just this morning, the
President announced major initiatives to improve the fuel efficiency of automobiles so that we can further reduce
emissions of greenhouse gases that are largely responsible for climate change and the problems resulting from it.
And that is just a start. As the President has made clear, he is committed to enacting a far-reaching new energy and
climate plan. As we take steps at home, we will also vigorously pursue negotiations, those sponsored by the United
Nations and those at the sub-global, regional, and bilateral level that can lead to binding international climate
agreements. No solution is feasible without all major emitting nations joining together and playing an important part.
I want to mention that USAID already has been a leader in advancing climate, clean energy, and conservation activities
in the developing world, drawing the clear and important link between solving the climate problem and promoting
sustainable development globally. Here at the Department, our OES bureau has just recently established a new program
that will link U.S. West Coast cities with Chinese and Indian cities to transfer clean energy technology. Our E bureaus
are playing a key role as well. We are committed to building on this work to help developing nations build efficient and
environmentally sustainable energy infrastructures through technology transfer, adaptation assistance, and support for
environmental mitigation so that nations have the tools and the means to address this crisis.
There is no doubt about the complexity and magnitude of the task ahead, but we cannot any longer shrink from the
challenge or overlook the chance. It offers us to be propelled toward a better future. If we are smart and bold, we can
turn the climate crisis into an economic opportunity that creates jobs, generates growth, enhances our competitive edge,
and ensures greater prosperity in the 21st century. This effort will require discipline and sustained attention at the
highest levels, as well as vigilance and dedication of one senior official who can harness the broad array of
shareholders in our government as we work toward these ends.
With the appointment today of a Special Envoy, we are sending an unequivocal message that the United States will be
energetic, focused, strategic and serious about addressing global climate change and the corollary issue of clean
energy.
Now our Special Envoy’s work will augment the ongoing work of this Department which has been our nation’s leader when it
comes to international efforts on climate change since the late 1980s through the establishment of the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change and negotiations related to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Kyoto
Protocol, as well as scores of other bilateral and multilateral climate-related initiatives.
The Special Envoy will serve as a principal advisor on international climate policy and strategy. He will be the
Administration’s chief climate negotiator. He will be leading our efforts with United Nations negotiations and processes
involving a smaller set of countries and bilateral sessions. Because the main cause of climate change is the burning of
fossil fuel and because the solution rests with our ability to shift the global economy from a high to a low carbon
energy base, the Envoy will be a lead participant in the development of climate and clean energy policy. He will
participate in all energy-related policy discussions that, across our government, can have an impact on carbon
emissions, and will be looking for opportunities to forge working alliances.
I’m extremely pleased to announce that Todd Stern has agreed to serve in this unprecedented role. Todd brings a vast
experience in the private sector and government. While he worked as a senior advisor in the Clinton White House, he
coordinated the administration’s overall efforts on climate change, and was the senior White House representative at the
United Nations climate negotiations in Kyoto and Buenos Aires.
Todd has the benefit of understanding the intersection of policy and politics. And I want to note that he started his
public service career working with my good friend, Senator Pat Leahy. Since leaving government, he has been actively
engaged in domestic and international climate and energy issues as a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress
and a frequent writer and speaker on this subject. Most importantly, Todd is a creative and clear thinker, a man of
great sensibility and good judgment. And I’m confident that he will have credibility with a broad range of
constituencies here at home and overseas.
Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Todd Stern, our new Special Envoy for Climate Change. (Applause.)
MR. STERN: Thank you very much. Thank you, Secretary Clinton. Thank you all for joining me today. This is a great, great
honor. I deeply appreciate the confidence that President Obama and Secretary Clinton have shown me. And I am excited by
the opportunity to work for two such inspiring leaders who recognize the enormity of this problem and are deeply
committed to solving it. And I – let me also say that 12 years ago, I worked for two other great and inspiring leaders,
Bill Clinton and Al Gore, and it was a great privilege for me to do that. And it’s a great privilege for me now to work
– be able to work for President Obama and Secretary Clinton.
Let me also express thanks to just a few people. To John Podesta, who more than anyone has been my mentor in Washington,
and is a model for all those who fight the good fight. To Tim Wirth, Stu Eizenstat and Frank Loy, who have led the way
in pursuing diplomatic progress on this issue and have taught me many valuable lessons. And most of all to my family who
are here with me today. To my wife Jen, who is my best and closest confidant in all things, and who, by the way, for the
record, introduced me to the world of Hillaryland, back in the day. To my three boys, Jacob, Zachary and Ben, who – Ben,
who is here somewhere – there he is – celebrating his fourth birthday today at the State Department. (Laughter.) They
are my inspiration in most everything I do, and certainly in taking on this challenge.
As the President and Secretary Clinton have made clear, climate change poses a profound threat to our future. If our
deepest obligation in life is to care for our children and leave a better world for them and those who follow, then we
must confront climate change now with an entirely new level of commitment, energy, and focus. Our scientists are telling
us, emphatically, that the rate at which we are warming the planet is unsustainable and will cause vast and potentially
catastrophic damage to our environment, our economy, and our national security.
And so the challenge before us is great, but so is the opportunity. Containing climate change will require nothing less
than transforming the global economy from a high-carbon to a low-carbon energy base. But done right, this can free us
from our dependence on foreign oil and become a driver for economic growth in the 21st century. President Obama and
Secretary Clinton have left no doubt that a new day is dawning in the U.S. approach to climate change and clean energy.
The time for denial, delay, and dispute is over. The time for the United States to take up its rightful place at the
negotiating table is here.
As a threshold matter, we must first press forward in our own country with the kind of bold, far-reaching climate and
energy plan that President Obama has called for. As the largest historic emitter of greenhouse gases, we can only expect
to lead abroad if we are prepared to act decisively at home. Yet we can only meet the climate challenge with a response
that is genuinely global. Eighty percent of greenhouse gas emissions are produced outside the United States, and a
rapidly growing percentage is produced in emerging market countries.
We will need to engage in vigorous, creative diplomacy to dramatically reduce emissions. And we will need to work with
vulnerable regions and countries to help them adapt to the climate change that is already locked into the system. In the
years ahead, every large emitter will have to make major changes in the way that they use energy and manage their
forests and lands. There is simply no other way to preserve a safe and livable world for our children.
This is no time for negotiators to cling to tired orthodoxies. Nor is it time for the kind of recriminations that have
marred too many efforts in the past. We cannot afford that now. We should all acknowledge the good faith of those who
are committed to this mission, pull our oars in the same direction, and do whatever it takes to get the job done. We
will need a strong, new multilateral agreement. We will need partnerships and joint ventures among countries,
collaborations between governments and the private sector, new technology and new financing. And we will need, above
all, political will.
That will has been evident for years in many countries and at many levels in the United States among governors, mayors,
and members of Congress, among business and labor leaders, among scientists, leaders of the faith community, NGOs and
the public. And it is manifestly evident now with President Obama, Secretary Clinton, and the broader Obama
Administration. I am eager to get started. I plan to run an inclusive process, reaching out to the broad range of
interested parties in this country and, of course, consulting closely with members of Congress on both sides of the
aisle.
Finally, let me say that one of the real pleasures I had working on this issue in the White House in the 1990s was the
opportunity to work with the absolutely superb professionals in this building and I greatly look forward to the
opportunity to start doing that again, as well as working with talented colleagues like Carol Browner, John Holdren,
Steven Chu and others in the new Administration and of course, with my counterparts around the world.
ends