Porterville Recorder

California knocks Trump as it extends climate change effort

- By ELLEN KNICKMEYER and JONATHAN J. COOPER

Gov. Jerry Brown and his predecesso­r, Arnold Schwarzene­gger, stood side by side Tuesday to cheer the extension of one of the most ambitious programs in the U.S. to reduce fossil fuel pollution, while condemning President Donald Trump’s failure to see climate change as a deadly threat.

SAN FRANCISCO — Gov. Jerry Brown and his predecesso­r, Arnold Schwarzene­gger, stood side by side Tuesday to cheer the extension of one of the most ambitious programs in the U.S. to reduce fossil fuel pollution, while condemning President Donald Trump’s failure to see climate change as a deadly threat.

Schwarzene­gger, a Republican, joined Brown, a Democrat, for a sunny outdoor ceremony overlookin­g San Francisco where the governor signed legislatio­n to extend a program limiting emissions of climate-changing carbons that both have urged the world to emulate.

Within view of the city’s skyscraper­s on Treasure Island, a man-made lowlying island threatened by rising seas from climate change, the signing was full of open rebukes for President Donald Trump, who withdrew the United States from the global Paris accord to cut carbon emissions.

“America is fully in the Paris agreement. There’s only one man that dropped out,” Schwarzene­gger said of Trump on Tuesday. “America did not drop out.”

Schwarzene­gger also pointed to the bipartisan support that lawmakers in the Democratic-dominated Legislatur­e gave to extending the cap-and-trade program by 10 years.

“This is a very important message. A message that we have a functional government in California where Democrats and Republican­s work together,” he said.

The program puts a limit on carbon emissions and requires polluters to obtain permits to release greenhouse gases. It had been due to expire in 2020.

Both governors have hailed the cap and trade as a successful way to reduce emissions that hasn’t taken the steam out of the economy of the nation’s most populous state.

Brown repeatedly evoked the darkest of scenarios Tuesday, calling the rapidly changing climate from the pollution of coal, gas and other fossil fuels second only to nuclear programs as a global threat.

“If we don’t do something about it, it is the end of the world,” Brown said.

Cap and trade “is an absolute requiremen­t for the survival and the world,” he later told reporters.

The signing follows a frenetic push by Brown and his legislativ­e allies to craft a plan that businesses and environmen­talists would find acceptable.

In the end, the extension was supported by a wide range of groups that said it’s the most cost-effective way to combat climate change. But it met fierce opposition from environmen­tal justice groups that said it’s riddled with giveaways to the oil industry, including too many free pollution permits.

Some Republican­s and anti-tax activists said it would lead to higher prices for food and energy.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY ERIC RISBERG ?? California Gov. Jerry Brown, right, and former Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger, left, talk before a climate bill signing on Treasure Island, Tuesday, in San Francisco. Gov. Jerry Brown signed legislatio­n Tuesday keeping alive California’s signature...
AP PHOTO BY ERIC RISBERG California Gov. Jerry Brown, right, and former Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger, left, talk before a climate bill signing on Treasure Island, Tuesday, in San Francisco. Gov. Jerry Brown signed legislatio­n Tuesday keeping alive California’s signature...

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