(CN) – True to his campaign style, Senator Bernie Sanders unflinchingly targeted the fossil fuel industry Thursday in unveiling an extensive $16.3 trillion climate plan that sets some of the most ambitious deadlines proposed yet by a presidential candidate for lowering carbon emissions.
The plan sets a deadline of as soon as 2030 to slash U.S. carbon emissions by 71% below acceptable levels fixed in 2017, but that goal is contingent upon a full-throated federal commitment to 100% renewable electricity and zero-emission cars.
Under the plan, fossil fuel use overall would be eliminated by 2050, and fracking and drilling on public land would be banned outright.
The proposal is comprehensive with the considerable investment, with Sanders saying his administration could create 20 million new jobs in steel and auto manufacturing, construction, energy efficiency retrofitting, coding and server farms and renewable power plants.
Sanders said he would raise taxes on corporate polluters as well as investors’ fossil fuel income and wealth. Those that pollute by way of fossil-fuel generation would see larger penalties, and any lingering fossil fuel infrastructure owners would be required to purchase “fossil fuel risk bond” to pay for disaster impacts.
Sanders said he also wants to reverse the 2015 decision by Congress to lifted an import and export ban on fossil fuels.
“We must no longer export any fossil fuels,” the proposal states. “Our coal and natural gas are contributing to increased emissions abroad. We will end the importation of fossil fuels to end incentives for extraction around the world. We can meet our energy needs and ensure energy security and independence without these imports.”
Through the creation of a Green Climate Fund, Sanders says the U.S. would pledge $200 billion to aid developing countries in their quest to reduce pollution by at least 36% over 10 years.
Creating new nuclear reactors is off the table but finding solutions to the existing nuclear-waste problem is very much a priority.
“We know that the toxic waste byproducts of nuclear plants are not worth the risks of the technology’s benefit, especially in light of lessons learned from the Fukushima meltdown and the Chernobyl disaster,” Sanders said. “To get to our goal of 100% sustainable energy, we will not rely on any false solutions like nuclear, geoengineering, carbon capture and sequestration, or trash incinerators.”
The plan includes new labor protections for workers, too, promising five years of unemployment insurance, guaranteed wages, vocational training and job placement for those who may have lost work in the transition to a green economy. Early retirement for those who can’t work – or choose not to – is also included.
Sanders says the deal pays for itself in 15 years, funded by fees and taxes assessed on the fossil fuel industry, and helped by ending the government’s $15 billion in subsidies for fossil-fuel generators.