Biden's top climate adviser on climate goals: ‘We need Congress to join in’

White House National Climate Advisor Gina McCarthy joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss the Biden Administration's climate change agenda, the Build Back Better plan, and the outlook for clean energy.

Video Transcript

AKIKO FUJITA: Moving on here, President Biden is doubling down on climate action on this Earth Day, signing an executive order aimed at protecting America's forests. The move comes as the president faces growing questions about his commitment to climate change, as he pushes to increase oil production to lower record gas prices. I spoke to White House National climate advisor Gina McCarthy and asked her how much of the president's climate agenda still remains intact.

GINA MCCARTHY: Well, really, first of all, Happy Earth Day. But really, Akiko, this is important for people to remember, is, there's two things happening right now. The president made an absolute commitment to climate change, and to address climate change. And that has not wavered one bit. He still remains committed and is even pushing forward to double down on that commitment.

But the challenge we have is that we have a Putin law that actually created an emergency situation, which the president is making sure that he takes control of. But that has no impact and won't have any impact on our commitment to the long-term challenge of climate change. Look, on day one, the president actually stood up on the world stage and put the US in a leadership position again. And we started a broad range of efforts that are not waning and, in fact, getting stronger to actually address and tackle the climate change in a way that science tells us we have to.

So we are not at all running away from that commitment. And in fact, we're moving faster to make sure that we recognize that the science is telling us we have to go faster, and we have to go farther than ever before. So you're going to see this Earth Day with the president double downing on his commitment and looking at Congress to really begin to act again. We have been talking about the work that we're doing, the success that we've had in a variety of areas, like transportation, like housing.

We are moving forward with the bipartisan infrastructure law, which is going to advance change and resilience in every community, especially those that are hardest hit, our environmental justice communities. But we're also going to make sure that Congress moves forward with some tax credits in some relief to families, because we have pulled together a climate plan that grows jobs, that save families money, that actually moves forward at the pace and breadth that we need. But we need Congress to join in this. And now is the time.