Arab News

Trump set to roll back climate protection­s

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WASHINGTON: Moving forward with a campaign pledge to unravel former President Barack Obama’s sweeping plan to curb global warming, President Donald Trump is set to sign an executive order Tuesday that will suspend, rescind or flag for review more than a half-dozen measures in an effort to boost domestic energy production in the form of fossil fuels.

As part of the roll-back, Trump will initiate a review of the Clean Power Plan, which restricts greenhouse gas emissions at coal-fired power plants. The regulation, which was the former president’s signature effort to curb carbon emissions, has been the subject of long-running legal challenges by Republican-led states and those who profit from burning oil, coal and gas.

Trump, who has called global warming a “hoax” invented by the Chinese, has repeatedly criticized the power-plant rule and others as an attack on American workers and the struggling US coal indus- try. The contents of the order were outlined to reporters in a sometimes tense briefing with a senior White House official, whom aides insisted speak without attributio­n despite President Trump’s criticism of the use of unnamed sources in the news media.

The official at one point appeared to break with mainstream climate science, denying familiarit­y with widely publicized concerns about the potential adverse economic impacts of climate change, such as rising sea levels and more extreme weather.

In addition to pulling back from the Clean Power Plan, the administra­tion will also lift a 14-monthold moratorium on new coal leases on federal lands.

The Obama administra­tion had imposed a three-year moratorium on new federal coal leases in January 2016, arguing that the $1 billion-a-year program must be modernized to ensure a fair financial return to taxpayers and address climate change.

Trump accused his predecesso­r of waging a “war on coal” and boasted in a speech to Congress that he has made “a historic effort to massively reduce job-crushing regulation­s,” including some that threaten “the future and livelihood­s of our great coal miners.”

The order will also chip away at other regulation­s, including scrapping language on the “social cost” of greenhouse gases. It will initiate a review of efforts to reduce the emission of methane in oil and natural gas production as well as a Bureau of Land Management hydraulic fracturing rule, to determine whether those reflect the president’s policy priorities.

It will also rescind Obama-era executive orders and memoranda, including one that addressed climate change and national security and one that sought to prepare the country for the impacts of climate change.

The administra­tion is still in discussion about whether it intends to withdraw from the Paris Agreement on climate change. But the moves on Tuesday will undoubtedl­y make it more difficult for the US to achieve its goals.

Trump’s Environmen­tal Protection Agency chief, Scott Pruitt, alarmed environmen­tal groups and scientists earlier this month when he said he does not believe carbon dioxide is a primary contributo­r to global warming. The statement is at odds with mainstream scientific consensus and Pruitt’s own agency.

 ??  ?? Proposals for the Environmen­tal Protection Agency in President Donald Trump's first budget are displayed at the Government Printing Office in Washington in this March 16 file photo. (AP)
Proposals for the Environmen­tal Protection Agency in President Donald Trump's first budget are displayed at the Government Printing Office in Washington in this March 16 file photo. (AP)

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