Orlando Sentinel

Go local in fight against climate change

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The gap between President Trump’s climate-change policy and the science-based needs of the world grows wider by the day. But if there’s a silver lining to the president’s rash and dangerous decision to withdraw the U.S. from the Paris climate agreement, it’s that it has reinvigora­ted the environmen­tal ambitions of a wide range of local, state and foreign government­s, as well as businesses — persuading them not only to carry on with their existing efforts to reduce carbon emissions, but to create broad coalitions to achieve even bigger gains.

You could see the manifestat­ion of that in the photos of California Gov. Jerry Brown sitting recently with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing, discussing ways California can work with China, the world’s biggest carbon emitter, to reduce greenhouse gases. Trump’s policy be damned, the picture implies; the American people will continue to work with the rest of the world.

State and local government­s — with the assistance of forward-looking market forces — already were reducing emissions when Trump won the White House. Brown’s Under2 MOU, a 2015 agreement of subnationa­l government­s around the world to reduce emissions, now has more than 170 signatorie­s representi­ng more than 1.1 billion people and 39 percent of the global economy.

Nearly 300 U.S. mayors, led in part by L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti, have joined together to reduce carbon emissions within their jurisdicti­ons. [This month Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer joined a dozen other Florida mayors and scores more from around the country in signing a letter pledging to uphold the Paris goals.] Businesses have been moving in a similar direction.

These are more than “Kumbaya” steps. Local and state government­s are economic engines that can expand demand for renewable energy by helping drive down the costs for nongovernm­ental consumers. This is one way around Trump’s fossil fuel-burning agenda. In March, Los Angeles joined 30 other cities in asking the automotive industry about the feasibilit­y of buying a combined 114,000 electric vehicles for their fleets, a potential $10-billion deal that would reduce city fleet emissions and drasticall­y expand the market for such vehicles . ...

California and 10 other states already have a mandate in place setting specific goals and applying pressure to auto manufactur­ers to increase sales of zero-emissions vehicles . ...

It’s not just California making these inroads. Washington recently announced a plan to make at least 20 percent of its state fleet of motor vehicles electric-powered. Houston, of all places, is the nation’s largest municipal user of renewable energy, with wind and solar providing 89 percent of its power. Minneapoli­s works with two investor-owned utilities to analyze usage data and target energysavi­ng programs to non-complying buildings. Across the Pacific, smog-choked Beijing is looking to replace nearly 70,000 taxis with electric vehicles.

Businesses have taken steps too, recognizin­g that there is money to be made and saved through reduced carbon emissions. Many major corporatio­ns publicly lobbied Trump to remain in the Paris agreement, arguing that their interests are “best served by a stable and practical framework facilitati­ng an effective and balanced global response.”

What subnationa­l government­s and corporatio­ns do now could have a significan­t impact on where the world winds up (businesses could help more if they stopped donating to the campaigns of climate-skeptic politician­s). Yes, much more needs to be done and the effort would be far more effective if it were made in tandem with the U.S. government. But that Trump has turned his back on a habitable planet doesn’t mean the rest of us should. Or can.

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