Las Vegas Review-Journal

Bloomberg to president: Stay in Paris accord

New U.N. envoy urges reassessme­nt of climate

- By Edith M. Lederer The Associated Press

UNITED NATIONS — The U.N.’S new envoy for climate action, former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, said Monday that President Donald Trump can become “a great leader” if he changes his mind about global warming and keeps the United States in the Paris climate agreement.

The billionair­e media mogul expressed hope that Trump will listen to his advisers, look at the data and support the 2015 Paris accord aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

Bloomberg spoke during a ceremony at which U.N. Secretary-general Antonio Guterres gave him the new title of U.N. special envoy for climate action, handing him the job of spurring internatio­nal action to help curb global warming.

A longtime activist for clean energy and a green economy, Bloomberg was appointed U.N. special envoy on cities and climate change by then U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon in January 2014. Since then, he has been traveling around the world campaignin­g for a reduction in carbon emissions.

Guterres announced that Bloomberg will help support a U.N. Climate Summit he is planning at U.N. headquarte­rs in 2019 to mobilize more ambitious action and start implementi­ng the Paris agreement .

Countries agreed in the Paris accord to limit global warming to 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit and do their best to keep it below 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit, compared with pre-industrial times. But the agreement starts after 2020 — and at U.N. climate talks in November over 170 countries stressed the importance of implementi­ng ambitious climate actions before 2020.

Trump announced last June that he was withdrawin­g the U.S. from the Paris agreement, fulfilling a campaign pledge.

He argued that the agreement had disadvanta­ged the U.S. “to the exclusive benefit of other countries,” leaving American businesses and taxpayers to absorb the cost.

Bloomberg has urged world leaders not to follow Trump, and he has pledged to save the Paris agreement.

Last October, for example, his foundation donated $64 million to a Sierra Club program seeking to phase out coal-fired power plants and reduce planet-warming carbon emissions.

Bloomberg said Monday that his foundation is interested “in spending a lot of money in helping us understand that climate change is real and it’s measurable.”

As examples, he said that for the first time the North Pole in the middle of the winter had temperatur­es above melting, oceans have risen over the last 20 or so years, and there are more frequent and powerful storms. In addition, Bloomberg said, there are floods where there used to be droughts — and droughts where there used to be floods.

Hesaidthes­olutionisf­orpeople everywhere to get together and change the way they live, “and we have to be a little smarter about how we generate energy.”

Guterres said last July that Bloomberg is convinced the United States will reach the Paris goals — despite Trump’s decision to abandon the agreement.

Bloomberg expressed hope that Trump will change his mind.

“And if that’s the case, that shows a great leader who, when facts change and they recognize something different, they’re not bound to what they did before. They’re willing to change,” Bloomberg said. “And I think it’s fair to say this president does change his views — generally it’s one day to the next, but over a longer period of time.”

Guterres also stressed the evidence of global warming.

He said the Arctic ice cap is “shrinking much more quickly and dramatical­ly than in the past — so climate change is running faster than we are.”

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Michael Bloomberg

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