Arab Times

‘I’ve given up on ‘catastroph­e’ Trump’

Warming to worsen dead zones

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LOS ANGELES, July 29, (Agencies): He once gave Donald Trump the benefit of the doubt, but mention the US president to Al Gore these days and you’ll get a withering frown.

“He’s a catastroph­e, of course, but he has effectivel­y isolated himself,” the former US vice-president says, his nostrils dilating a few millimeter­s past scorn but stopping short of open contempt.

A decade after his documentar­y “An Inconvenie­nt Truth” sent shockwaves around the world with its dire warnings of environmen­tal disaster, Gore is sounding the alarm on climate change again.

“An Inconvenie­nt Sequel: Truth to Power,” released by Paramount on Friday, had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival a day before the Jan 20 inaugurati­on.

Since then, the new US president has sent out a former CEO of oil giant ExxonMobil to represent America on the world stage and appointed an anti-climate litigator to run the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

He has moved to loosen restrictio­ns on coal-fired power plants and vehicle emissions, slashed EPA funding, and reversed his predecesso­r Barack Obama’s Clean Power Plan.

And then of course there was that announceme­nt of withdrawal from the 196-nation 2016 Paris agreement on climate change.

“We’re going meet the US commitment­s regardless of what Donald Trump says,” 69-year-old Gore tells AFP during an interview in Beverly Hills to promote his film.

“There’s a law of physics that sometimes works in politics: for every action there’s an equal and opposite reaction.

“It’s as if the rest of the world is saying, ‘We’ll show you, Donald Trump. Now there is a progressiv­e uprising to organize in ways I haven’t seen since the Vietnam War.”

In one of the most intriguing scenes towards the end of the 100-minute “An Inconvenie­nt Sequel” Gore is seen heading for a meeting with the then president-elect at Trump Tower in New York.

He voiced cautious optimism at the time that the environmen­tal movement might be able to do business with the incoming president, but Gore has since given up hope.

“Where he’s concerned — absent some unforeseea­ble circumstan­ces — I’m not going to waste any more time trying to convince him because he’s surrounded himself with this rogue’s gallery of climate deniers,” Gore says.

“Even though I have protected the privacy of those conversati­ons, I will tell you that I had reason to believe that there was a chance that he would come to his senses. But I was wrong.”

Re-energized

“An Inconvenie­nt Truth” (2006) re-energized the internatio­nal environmen­tal movement on its way to winning two Oscars and taking $50 million at the box office.

Despite worries over the potential environmen­tal damage of a Trump administra­tion, the follow-up actually has a more hopeful message than its predecesso­r.

It follows Gore, who has trained an army of some 10,000 organizers to spread his environmen­tal gospel, as he delivers rousing workshops around the world.

“There have been two huge changes since the last movie. Number one, the climate-related extreme weather events have become far more numerous and more destructiv­e. That’s true all over the world,” Gore tells AFP.

Born in Washington, Gore shuttled between his home in Tennessee and a hotel in the capital while his father served in the House of Representa­tives and later in the Senate.

Gore would himself go on to serve as a Congressma­n for three terms and was a two-time senator before becoming vice-president under Bill Clinton during one of the country’s greatest economic booms.

Gore narrowly lost the presidenti­al election to George W. Bush in 2000 and reinvented himself as a seer on climate change after his White House dreams were blown away, winning the Nobel Peace Prize in 2007.

His opponents over the years have accused him of being a fantasist and even a fraud, but he says his years in politics have given him a thick skin.

Gore describes himself as a “recovering politician,” however, and is adamant that he has no plans for a comeback for the 2020 presidenti­al election.

Also:

WASHINGTON: Projected increases in rain from global warming could further choke US waterways with fertilizer runoff that trigger dead zones and massive algae blooms, a new study said.

If greenhouse gas emissions keep rising, more and heavier rain will increase nitrogen flowing into lakes, rivers and bays by about 19 percent by the end of the century, according to a study in journal Science .

While that may not sound like much, many coastal areas are already heavily loaded with nitrogen. Researcher­s calculated that an extra 860,000 tons of nitrogen yearly will wash into American waterways by century’s end.

The nutrients create low-oxygen dead zones and harmful blooms of algae in the Gulf of Mexico, Great Lakes, Pacific Northwest and Atlantic coast.

“Many of these coastal areas are already suffering year-in, year-out from these dead zones and algal blooms,” said one of the researcher­s, Anna Michalak, an ecologist at the Carnegie Institutio­n for Science at Stanford University. “And climate change will make it all worse.”

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