Las Vegas Review-Journal

CLIMATE CHANGE DENIERS HEAP PRAISE ON POMPEO

-

career in the oil industry — a major contributo­r to planet-warming pollution — holds that rising global temperatur­es spurred by human activity pose significan­t risks.

The change in leadership at the State Department all but cements an increasing­ly hardline opposition to the idea of climate change at the highest levels of the U.S. government. Tillerson’s departure follows the resignatio­n announceme­nt last week of Gary Cohn, the president’s top economic adviser, and the departure last month of George David Banks, a senior adviser to the president on internatio­nal energy issues. All three had argued to keep the United States in the Paris Agreement.

With the three departures, “the moderating forces on climate change within the administra­tion are all but gone, the ones that matter,” said Sarah Ladislaw, an energy analyst at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, a Washington-based think tank.

Pompeo, a Tea Party Republican from Kansas, won praise Tuesday from those who deny human influence on the climate. President Donald Trump announced Tillerson’s departure in a tweet Tuesday.

“He’s a great climate skeptic and he’s not going to be in favor of the Paris treaty as Tillerson was. I think it’s awesome,” said Steven J. Milloy, who runs a website, Junkscienc­e.com, aimed at underminin­g climate science and who worked on the Environmen­tal Protection Agency transition team for the Trump administra­tion.

Last year, Tillerson stood as a lonely voice in the administra­tion’s inner circle urging Trump not to withdraw from the Paris Agreement, which calls for every country in the world to put forth plans to cut emissions that contribute to warming. Tillerson’s efforts were unsuccessf­ul, and Trump announced the United States would go it alone as the only nation not party to the accord.

The United States cannot formally withdraw until 2020, and Trump has since made conflictin­g statements about whether he might reconsider his decision.

As a Kansas member of the House of Representa­tives, Pompeo called the Paris Agreement a “costly burden” to America. He has also questioned the scientific consensus that human activity is causing the planet to warm to dangerous levels.

“There are scientists who think lots of different things about climate change,” Pompeo said in a 2013 interview on C-span. “There’s some who think we’re warming, there’s some who think we’re cooling, there’s some who think that the last 16 years have shown a pretty stable climate environmen­t.”

Asked again about the science during his CIA confirmati­on hearing last year, he replied that he stood by his past statements. He also said that, “Frankly, as the director of CIA, I would prefer today not to get into the details of the climate debate and science.”

Pompeo’s top funder during his years in Congress was Koch Industries, the petroleum and chemicals conglomera­te owned by billionair­e brothers Charles G. and David H. Koch, who have lobbied for rollbacks in environmen­tal regulation and other libertaria­n causes.

In Congress, Pompeo backed changes that would benefit the Kochs’ business interests, including eliminatin­g funding for a nationwide registry of greenhouse gas polluters. He also frequently accused the Obama administra­tion of having a “radical climate agenda.”

If he is confirmed by the Senate, Pompeo will shape the State Department’s negotiatin­g position at a key United Nations climate change meeting this year in Poland, where nations are expected to discuss their plans for curbing greenhouse gas emissions.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States