Minnesota鈥檚 New Carbon-Free Energy Plan is a Win for Birds and People

The state is the latest to adopt 100 percent clean energy goals.
A parent loon feeds a fish to its chick sitting on the other parent's back. A second chick swims in the water beside them.
Common Loons. Photo: Joanie Christian/爆料公社 Photography Awards

ST. PAUL, MN 鈥 Today, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz signed a clean energy bill into law after it passed in the House and Senate. The new law requires the state鈥檚 utilities to get 100 percent of their electricity from carbon-free energy sources by 2040. Decarbonizing the electric sector will significantly cut Minnesota鈥檚 carbon emissions, which is critical for minimizing climate threats to birds and people. 

础耻诲耻产辞苍鈥檚 Survival by Degrees report shows that climate change is the biggest threat to birds and people alike. Adopting forward-looking clean energy policy is critical to reducing pollution, slowing the rise in global temperatures, and preserving the high-quality habitats that birds like Minnesota鈥檚 Common Loon need to survive. 鈥淢innesota鈥檚 100% Clean Energy bill, now signed into law, is an actionable plan that aligns with the state鈥檚 climate goals, increases the efficacy of climate action in other sectors, and begins to address climate change as a critical threat to Minnesota鈥檚 birds,鈥 said Lindsay J. Brice, policy director for 爆料公社 Minnesota Iowa Missouri.  

The 爆料公社 Minnesota Iowa Missouri team has long supported the movement towards expanding clean energy in the state. 爆料公社 MN IA MO sat on working groups for Minnesota鈥檚 , met with Governor Waltz to present and discuss Survival by Degrees, and supported this and prior clean energy bills. 鈥淢innesota鈥檚 commitment to reaching carbon-free electricity is good news for the state鈥檚 climate-threatened species鈥攁nd for Minnesotans who now have access to a more sustainable future,鈥 said Gary Moody, 础耻诲耻产辞苍鈥檚 director of state and local climate strategy. 鈥淲e will continue to advocate for responsible clean energy policy like this in the Midwest and throughout the country.鈥  

Minnesota joins the of states and territories that have adopted 100 percent clean energy goals鈥攊ncluding Illinois, New Mexico, Connecticut, and Washington. This comes at a time when 76 percent of Minnesotans report feeling concerned about climate change and 60 percent are interested in seeing increased use of wind, solar, and other renewable energy, according to a . 

More about 础耻诲耻产辞苍鈥檚 policy on renewable energy can be found here.    

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Media Contact:
Megan Moriarty, megan.moriarty@audubon.org