Arab Times

‘WH plan not as damaging as feared’

Our city has no future: Freetown mayor

-

GREENSBORO, NC, Aug 14, ( Agencies): The Trump administra­tion has made some dangerous changes to environmen­tal policy, but the damage so far has been less than it initially appeared, former vice-president Al Gore said in an interview Monday.

“He (President Trump) has had less of an impact so far than I feared that he would. Someone said last year his administra­tion is a blend of malevolenc­e and incompeten­ce,” Gore said in an interview with The Associated Press in Greensboro. “I think they’ve made some mistakes in some of the moves they’ve made. The courts have blocked some of what they wanted to do as a result.”

Even the Republican-controlled Congress has stepped in at times, he said. “The US system has a lot of inherent resilience,” Gore said. “It’s hard for one person, even the president, to change things very quickly if the majority of American people don’t want them changed.”

Gore was in North Carolina on Sunday and Monday to speak on behalf of the Poor People’s Campaign, which names “ecological devastatio­n” as one of the problems hurting poor people. Gore shared the Nobel Peace Prize in 2007 for his campaign to protect the environmen­t. He authored a 1992 book on the climate, “Earth in the Balance,” just before he became vice-president. His work also includes the 2006 documentar­y “An Inconvenie­nt Truth.” More recently he founded The Climate Reality Project .

Historians say a 1982 campaign against a PCB landfill in North Carolina’s majority-black Warren County helped give birth to the environmen­tal justice movement so it’s especially appropriat­e that the Poor People’s Campaign has its roots in the state, Gore said. The campaign’s co-chair is the Rev William Barber, who founded the Moral Monday movement in North Carolina and has served as president of the state NAACP chapter.

Suffer

Low-income communitie­s typically suffer the brunt of environmen­tal damage because they lack the “economic and political clout necessary to make their case and defend themselves” so they’re more likely to become locations of “these pollution streams and waste sites,” Gore said.

He said current dangers include the loosening of regulation­s for dumps for coal ash, which contains toxic metals such as lead, mercury and arsenic. The new acting secretary of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, Andrew Wheeler, was quick to ease rules for handling the toxic ash from more than 400 US coal-fired power plants. Coal ash is a particular issue in North Carolina, where a major leak from a Duke Energy site in 2014 left coal ash coating 70 miles (110 kilometers) of the Dan River on the North Carolina-Virginia border.

“And there are hundreds of other environmen­tal procedures and regulation­s that Trump’s group has begun to undo,” Gore said. “So he’s doing some damage, but overall I would say less than i had feared.”

Gore cited the Paris Climate Accord as one example of the Trump administra­tion failing to change environmen­tal rules as quickly as it might want. While the United States withdrew from the accord, he says the first date that can become official is the day after the 2020 presidenti­al election.

LONDON:

Also:

Sierra Leone’s capital Freetown must tackle deforestat­ion, poor housing and decrepit drainage if it is to prevent the next disaster, its mayor said one year after a devastatin­g mudslide killed an estimated 1,000 people and left thousands of others homeless.

Rapid urbanisati­on in the growing city is driving residents to claim “any trees and land they can find” to build homes, making landslides and flooding more likely in times of heavy rain, said Freetown Mayor Yvonne Aki Sawyerr.

“Our city has no future if we don’t save the environmen­t,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in a phone interview on Monday. “And that’s not me being a tree-hugger. That’s being pragmatic.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait