Equilibrium & Sustainability

South Africa, Treasury form anti-poaching task force

South Africa and the United States will collaborate to track and cut off the financial flows that connect organized crime to wildlife trafficking, the U.S. Treasury Department announced Wednesday.

“To help save wildlife populations from further approaching and disrupt the associated illicit trade, we must ‘follow the money’ in the same way we do other serious crimes,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said a statement.

Yellen has spent the past week on a tour of Africa, where she has sought to bolster U.S. ties with the region as well as counter overwhelming Chinese influence on the continent, Reuters reported. 

China is the primary destination for poached wildlife, U.S. officials told Reuters. 

Illegal wildlife trafficking is the fourth largest organized crime sector in the world, raking in up to $23 billion a year, according to the Conservation Strategy Fund. 

While wildlife trafficking would seem outside the Treasury Department’s mandate, the global importance of the U.S. dollar means “the illegal wildlife trade presents a unique money-laundering threat” to the United States, according to the Treasury statement. 

Treasury described wildlife trafficking as an issue which drew together diverse administration priorities, from slowing climate change to combating transnational organized crime.

Welcome to Equilibrium, a newsletter that tracks the growing global battle over the future of sustainability. We’re Saul Elbein and Sharon Udasin. Subscribe here.

Today, we’ll look at a new ESG-related caucus in Congress. Then, we’ll explore the disputed fate of electric vehicle tax credits, followed by a look at how kids are using potentially toxic cosmetics.

House Dems create ‘sustainable investment’ caucus

A group of House Democrats has formed a new caucus to advocate for sustainable investing — a rapidly growing sector that already accounts for trillions in global investment. 

Industry demand: The caucus will advocate for policies sought by the sustainable investment industry, sometimes called environmental, social and governance (ESG) investment.

Read more here.

Manchin targets Treasury amid EV tax credit dispute

Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) has introduced a bill that would eliminate a delay in setting stricter limits on electric vehicle (EV) tax credits, our colleague Rachel Frazin reported for The Hill. 

His bill would close a loophole that has temporarily left a wide range of EVs eligible for tax credits — which would not be the case under the forthcoming restrictions. 

Disputed delays: The legislation targets a Treasury Department move to temporarily delay the restrictions in question.  

What’s the catch? The restrictions in question mandated that by the start of this year, 50 percent of the value of an EV’s battery components must be manufactured or assembled in North America to be eligible for a $3,750 tax credit.

When will these take effect? The Treasury Department in December moved to delay the effective date of the restrictions, Frazin reported at the time.  
 

By law, the stipulations cannot take effect until the Treasury issues guidance for their implementation — which the department pushed back until March.  

How would Manchin’s bill change this? The legislation would make the new EV tax credits — and their stringent requirements — take effect without waiting for the Treasury Department to issue its guidance, The Detroit News reported. 

Such a situation would dramatically decrease the number of vehicles that qualify for subsidies, according to the News.  

Does the legislation stand a chance? The legislation is unlikely to become law, as it would require President Biden’s signature. 

But Frazin described the effort as “the latest flashpoint in tensions that the West Virginia senator has with the administration.” 

Most kids using potentially toxic makeup, face paints

Most U.S. children are using cosmetics and body care products that could contain carcinogens and other toxic chemicals, a new study has found. 

Lured by lip gloss: About 70 percent of parents surveyed said their children use items such as glitter, face paint and lip gloss marketed for kids, according to the study, published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 

Such products often feature bright colors, animals and cartoon characters that serve “to attract the attention of children,” the authors noted. 

Looks can be deceiving: Research has shown that many of these products contain toxins such as lead, asbestos, phthalates, formaldehyde and “forever chemicals,” the authors warned. 

What did they find? The researchers administered a 39-question survey via social media nationwide and by distributing flyers to parents and guardians of kids ages 12 and under. 

What products are kids using? The product most popular among children was face paint — with 60 percent of respondents reporting use.  

Approximately 44 percent of the kids said they used hair products, while 41 percent used other facial cosmetics, 32 percent utilized nail polish and 30 percent wore lip makeup, according to the study. 

Disparities among communities: The researchers also identified differences in the use of makeup and body products among children from different communities and cultures.   

To read the rest of the story, please click here

Wednesday Wheels

Tesla scales up its electric vehicle (EV) production, why first-class air passengers may not be responsible for extra emissions and a natural graphite shortage threatens EV growth. 

Tesla adding 3,000 workers to Nevada plant 

Airfares, rather than cabin class, better determine passenger emissions: study 

Key EV mineral in short supply 

Please visit The Hill’s Sustainability section online for more and check out other newsletters here. We’ll see you tomorrow.