The Citizen (KZN)

Trying to weather Trump’s rhetoric

US WORKING ON CLIMATE CHANGE

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US President Donald Trump has bashed internatio­nal efforts to combat climate change and questioned the scientific consensus that global warming is dangerous and driven by human consumptio­n of fossil fuels.

But there is a disconnect between what Trump says at home and what his government does abroad. While attention has been focused on Trump’s rhetoric, state department envoys, federal agencies and government scientists remain active participan­ts in internatio­nal efforts to both research and fight climate change, according to US and foreign representa­tives involved in those efforts.

“We really don’t detect any change with the Americans,” said one of the officials, Aleksi Harkonen of Finland, who chairs the eight-nation Arctic Council’s key group of senior officials, who are charged with protecting a region warming faster than any other on Earth.

Over the past year, the United States has helped draft the rulebook for implementi­ng the Paris climate accord, signed internatio­nal memoranda calling for global action to fight climate change, boosted funding for overseas clean energy projects, and contribute­d to global research on the dangers and causes of the Earth’s warming.

While US participat­ion in internatio­nal forums – including the Paris accord and the Arctic Council – has been reported, its continued, broad and constructi­ve support for climate change efforts in these gatherings has not.

This business-as-usual approach has surprised some of America’s foreign partners, along with some of Trump’s allies, who had expected the new administra­tion to match its rhetoric with an obstructio­nist approach to combating climate change.

“I am concerned that much of our climate policy remains on autopilot,” complained Trump’s former energy advisor Myron Ebell, now a research director at the right-leaning Competitiv­e Enterprise Institute, who said it reflects a failure by the administra­tion to fill key positions and replace staffers who oppose the president’s agenda.–

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