Waterloo Region Record

Trump: Gut funds for climate change, boost oil and gas

Budget mentions climate change once and it involves eliminatin­g funds to research it

- MICHAEL BIESECKER

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion is targeting federal funding for studying and tracking climate change while boosting the continued burning of planet-warming fossil fuels.

The White House’s 2019 spending plan seeks to reduce or eliminate climate science programs across an array of federal agencies, from gutting efforts to track greenhouse gas emissions and research to eliminatin­g funding for NASA satellites that study the impacts of climate change.

Though President Donald Trump’s budget unveiled earlier this week is highly unlikely to be adopted by Congress, it is a direct indicator of just how little weight his administra­tion is giving to the increasing­ly dire warnings from climate scientists about longer droughts, stronger storms and rising seas.

Trump has called climate change a “hoax” and appointed forceful advocates for increased oil, gas and coal production to lead key federal agencies overseeing environmen­tal enforcemen­t, energy production and public lands.

In the 160-page budget summary released by the White House, the term “climate change” is only mentioned once — in the name of a science program marked for eliminatio­n at the Environmen­tal Protection Agency. A week after EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt suggested global warming might be beneficial to humanity, his agency issued a 47-page strategic plan for the next five years that does not include the word “climate.” Environmen­talists and climate scientists say the deep budget cuts, if implemente­d, would amount to suppressin­g facts about global warming while turning up the Earth’s thermostat by pumping more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.

“Trump’s budget is a statement of his priorities, and this budget demonstrat­es that he could care less about protecting clean air, clean water, public health or our public lands,” said Michael Brune, executive director of the Sierra Club. “This is a shameful, ideologica­l document that represents the extent to which Trump has fully given himself over to corporate special interests above all else.”

Trump’s proposed budget for EPA eliminates $16.5 million in funding and 48 full-time jobs at the Global Change Research program, which develops scientific informatio­n related to climate change and its impacts on human health, the environmen­t and the economy. Also zeroed out is $66 million for the Atmospheri­c Protection Program, a collection of climate-related partnershi­ps seeking voluntaril­y air pollution reductions by private companies.

EPA’s Atmospheri­c Protection Program, tasked with completing an annual U.S. inventory of greenhouse gas emissions to fulfil internatio­nal climate treaty obligation­s would be slashed from $103 million to less than $14 million, a reduction of about 87 per cent. The White House would also eliminate the Science to Achieve Results program, which provides $28 million in research grants and academic fellowship­s in environmen­tal science and engineerin­g. At the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, money for climaterel­ated research would be cut by more than one third, to $99 million. That includes eliminatin­g research programs to better understand the Earth climate system and research into decreases in Arctic sea ice. Trump’s budget also seeks to cancel five Earth-observing satellites costing about $133 million in 2019. That includes a satellite designed to monitor Earth’s carbon cycle, which is key to tracking climate change.

Meanwhile, the White House is promoting what Trump has dubbed an “energy dominance” strategy, emphasizin­g increased investment­s in oil, gas and coal.

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