A roadmap for protecting the environment under a climate-change-denier-in-chief
In the days leading up to Trump’s inauguration, Fusion is highlighting some of the issues most important to our readers and what to do to prepare for the incoming administration, which is set to assume power in just a few days. On deck for today is the environment.
What Trump has been up to:
When it comes to the environment, Trump is truly singular. Currently, he’s the only world leader who denies the science of climate change. The president-elect has famously called climate change a hoax created by the Chinese “to make U.S. manufacturing non-competitive,” a comment he later walked back as a joke. And as if that weren’t enough to raise eyebrows, during the campaign his environmental proposals included rebuilding the Keystone Pipeline, “saving” the coal industry, and “canceling” the UN Paris Climate Agreement, which sets up a framework for countries to limit their greenhouse gas emissions.
Trump has also been lukewarm on alternative energy, opposing wind farming because the turbines look “like a junkyard” and “half of them are broken”—despite insisting on wind energy to power one of his Manhattan hotels back in 2010.
While Trump has voiced support for Dakota Access oil, his embrace of the fossil fuel industry—captured best by his selection of Exxon Mobil CEO Rex Tillerson as secretary of state—suggests that Trump could bring serious environmental harm to communities far beyond Standing Rock. Trump’s unwillingness thus far to be tough with Russia, currently the largest greenhouse gas emitter not to ratify the Paris Agreement, could mean that country will have less incentive to take bold action on climate change.