Porterville Recorder

U.S. official makes brief appearance at G7 environmen­t summit

- By PAOLO SANTALUCIA and FRANK JORDANS

BOLOGNA, Italy — Top environmen­t officials from the Group of Seven wealthy democracie­s met Sunday in Italy amid ongoing difference­s between the U.S. and other members of the club over how to deal with climate change.

Scott Pruitt, head of the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency, attended the first few hours of the two-day summit before returning to Washington for a Cabinet meeting, U.S. officials said.

Before his departure, Pruitt’s counterpar­ts from Britain, France, Germany, Canada, Japan and Italy expressed their disappoint­ment at President Donald Trump’s recent decision to pull the U.S. out of the 2015 Paris Agreement.

The other six countries in the G-7 all agreed at last month’s political summit of national leaders in Sicily to work toward making the Paris climate accord effective.

Italy’s environmen­t minister, Gian Luca Galletti, who is leading the G-7 environmen­t meeting in Bologna, said that despite the split, dialogue had to continue, including on other environmen­tal issues such as ocean pollution.

Among those pushing hardest to maintain internatio­nal momentum on combating global warming is Germany, which hosts this year’s annual climate summit in November. Environmen­t Minister Barbara Hendricks met Friday with California Gov. Jerry Brown to demonstrat­e that Germany is prepared to work with individual U.S. states if Trump refuses to be part of the Paris effort any longer.

California is a member of the ‘Under 2 Coalition ,’ a group of 175 states and cities that aim to help keep global warming below 2 degrees Celsius, a threshold scientists say is necessary to prevent catastroph­ic climate change.

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