FACT SHEET: Biden- ⁠ Harris Administration Announces New Actions to Detect and Reduce Climate Super Pollutants

Half of today’s climate change is caused by super pollutant greenhouse gases—including methane, hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), and nitrous oxide (N2O)—that are far more potent than carbon dioxide (CO2). Slashing emissions of these super-pollutants is the fastest way to tackle climate change and a critical complement to reducing carbon dioxide—while creating good-paying clean energy jobs, preventing hundreds of thousands of deaths annually due to respiratory illnesses, and boosting food security.

Since Day One in office, President Biden has taken historic action to dramatically reduce U.S. and global super pollutant emissions. For example, domestically the Biden-Harris administration is implementing the November 2021 U.S. Methane Action Plan that takes a whole-of-government approach to cut consumer costs, protect workers and communities, maintain and create high-quality, union-friendly jobs, and promote U.S. innovation and manufacturing of critical new technologies essential to tackling the climate crisis.

Globally, President Biden has rallied the world to tackle methane emissions through the Global Methane Pledge to reduce global methane emissions 30 percent by 2030, and he signed the U.S. ratification of the Kigali Amendment, an international agreement to phase down super-polluting HFCs and avoid up to 0.5 °C of global warming by 2100. In total, this administration has taken actions that will reduce super pollutants by nearly 300 megatons per year domestically by 2030, equivalent to 70 million gasoline-powered cars.

Meanwhile, many Republicans in Congress continue to deny the very existence of climate change and remain committed to repealing the President’s Inflation Reduction Act—the biggest climate investment in history—which would put good-paying jobs in jeopardy and undermine the health and safety of their own constituents.

Today the Biden-Harris Administration is hosting a White House Super Pollutants Summit with U.S. officials, companies, environmental organizations, unions, philanthropies, and international partners to announce new domestic and international actions to tackle climate super pollutants and celebrate successes in reducing super pollutants to date, including:

New Efforts to Advance Detection and Reporting of Super Pollutants

New Industry Leadership to Reduce Nitrous Oxide Emissions