The Star Malaysia - Star2

Climate in peril?

The dangers of Donald Trump to the environmen­t can be seen in his Cabinet team.

-

HE brushed off climate change as a Chinese hoax, then called it the real deal and finally declared that “nobody really knows.”

Donald Trump is sending mixed signals on whether or how he will try to slow Earth’s warming temperatur­es and rising sea levels.

Since he was elected, Trump has met with prominent climate activists Leonardo DiCaprio and Al Gore. He’s suggested his daughter Ivanka, a close adviser, has a particular interest in the issue and could be his envoy. But he has also tapped oil industry champions for his Cabinet, men who say they’re determined to reverse President Barack Obama’s efforts to rein in (greenhouse gas) emissions.

The pushback has already started. A memo sent to the Energy Department in early December, requested a list of all department employees and contractor­s who attended the annual global climate talks hosted by the United Nations within the last five years. It also asked for a list of all department employees or contractor­s who have attended any meetings on the social cost of carbon, a measuremen­t that federal agencies use to weigh the costs and benefits of new energy and environmen­t regulation­s. It also asked for all publicatio­ns written by employees at the department’s 17 national laboratori­es for the past three years.

“This feels like the first draft of an eventual political enemies list,” said a Department of Energy employee, who asked not to be identified, fearing reprisal by the Trump transition team.

“When Donald Trump said he wanted to drain the swamp it apparently was just to make room for witch hunts and it’s starting here at the DOE and our 17 national labs,” the employee said.

Trump’s team later said the questionna­ire “was not authorised” and that the person responsibl­e had been “counselled.”

Yet if Trump’s record on climate change is complex, in his administra­tion, he won’t be the only one.

Exxon Mobil boss

Scientists also held a protest rally in conjunctio­n with the American Geophysica­l Union’s fall meeting on Dec 13 in San Francisco. The rally was to call attention to unwarrante­d attacks by the incoming Trump administra­tion against scientists advocating on the issue of climate change.

Two days after Trump was elected, oil giant Exxon Mobil tweeted a declaratio­n of support for the Paris deal, a global emissions-cutting pact that marks the biggest step the world has taken to date on climate. Weeks later, Trump tapped Exxon CEO Rex Tillerson to be secretary of state, a position putting Tillerson at the helm of US efforts to implement, or scuttle, the Paris deal.

Though environmen­talists often vilify Exxon, Tillerson almost surely signed off personally on the tweet, said individual­s familiar with Exxon’s structure and operations, who weren’t authorised to comment publicly and requested anonymity. And under Tillerson’s leadership, Exxon has started planning for climate change and even voiced support for a carbon tax.

So, in a strange twist, Trump’s selection of an oil magnate for chief diplomat has been reassuranc­e to some that the next administra­tion may not herald the end of climate change efforts that burgeoned under Obama.

“Tillerson is probably the leastbad choice among a lot of bad options,” said Andrew Logan of Ceres, a coalition of institutio­nal investors concerned about climate change.

“Tillerson could be a moderating influence on Trump, keeping things from being as disastrous as they otherwise might be.”

Democratic attorneys general have been suing Exxon over allegation­s the company for decades concealed its own scientific research showing climate change was occurring. Tillerson, in public comments, has explicitly acknowledg­ed climate change and said the risks could be “significan­t,” but has suggested it’s a low priority.

“There are much more pressing priorities that we as a human being race and society need to deal with,” Tillerson said in 2012, citing people living in poverty who he said would benefit from cheap energy.

Denier of change

Other Trump picks are openly hostile to calls to act on climate. His choice to run the Environmen­tal Protection Agency (responsibl­e for domestic emissions-cutting measures) is Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt, a vocal denier of climate change science. The vast majority of peer-reviewed studies and climate scientists agree the planet is warming, mostly due to man-made sources. But Pruitt has sued the EPA repeatedly to stop its climate agenda, including Obama’s sweeping power plant rules.

And Trump’s nominee to run the Energy Department, former Governor Rick Perry, also has questioned climate science while working to promote coal-fired power in Texas. Though Perry, like Tillerson and Pruitt, has close ties to the oil industry, he also oversaw the growth of renewable power in Texas, which became the lead wind-energy producer while he was governor.

Perry in 2012 famously called for abolishing the Energy Department, which plays a major role funding clean energy projects. Under Obama, the US has dramatical­ly ramped up production of renewa- ble energy from sources like solar, in part through Energy Department grants.

Amy Myers Jaffe, an energy policy expert at the University of California-Davis, said Trump’s administra­tion is likely to embrace Tillerson’s view that engineerin­g and innovation, not government, are the solution. She said the falling cost of clean energy and desire of companies to appear climatefri­endly are likely to produce those changes anyway.

“The common denominato­r looking at Trump’s appointmen­ts so far is that there’s clearly a sentiment that the energy sector is overregula­ted, and therefore we could probably expect a rollback,” Jaffe said. “But I think we’re getting to the point where some of these technologi­es can stand on their own.”

Yet those looking to Trump for clarity won’t find it, at least not yet.

In a television interview last week, Trump said he was still “studying” the Paris pact to determine whether to pull the US out, as he threatened during the campaign. And asked about the science of climate change, Trump demurred.

“I’m still open-minded,” Trump said. “Nobody really knows.” – Agencies

 ??  ?? Scientists protested Trump’s attacks on climate change research on Dec 13. — Photos: AP
Scientists protested Trump’s attacks on climate change research on Dec 13. — Photos: AP
 ??  ?? Greenland is losing about 18 trillion kg more ice a year than scientists had thought, according to a new study from Ohio State University.
Greenland is losing about 18 trillion kg more ice a year than scientists had thought, according to a new study from Ohio State University.
 ??  ?? The city of Miami Beach, Florida, is regularly hit by floods caused by high tides, an ominous sign of rising sea levels.
The city of Miami Beach, Florida, is regularly hit by floods caused by high tides, an ominous sign of rising sea levels.
 ??  ?? President-elect Trump has brushed off global warming as a Chinese hoax, then called it the real deal and finally declared that ‘nobody really knows.’
President-elect Trump has brushed off global warming as a Chinese hoax, then called it the real deal and finally declared that ‘nobody really knows.’
 ??  ?? Perry, Trump’s nominee to run the Energy Department, once called for abolishing the very same department (which funds clean energy projects). — Reuters
Perry, Trump’s nominee to run the Energy Department, once called for abolishing the very same department (which funds clean energy projects). — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia