San Francisco Chronicle

Trump leads ferocious fight against carbon regulation­s

- By John Flesher and Michael Biesecker John Flesher and Michael Biesecker are Associated Press writers.

WASHINGTON — While President Trump’s beliefs about global warming remain something of a mystery, his actions make one thing clear: He doesn’t consider it a problem for the federal government to solve.

Trump’s recent decision to pull out of the Paris climate deal was just his latest rapidfire move to weaken or dismantle federal initiative­s to reduce carbon emissions, which scientists say are heating the planet to levels that could have disastrous consequenc­es.

Trump is waging war against efforts to curb U.S. dependence on fossil fuels. He’s done that through executive orders targeting climate change programs and regulation­s, massive proposed spending cuts and key appointmen­ts such as Scott Pruitt as chief of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

To what degree Trump will succeed remains to be seen. Despite the fanfare of his Paris announceme­nt, including a pledge that his administra­tion will halt all work on it, formally removing the U.S. from the accord could take more than three years. Rescinding the Clean Power Plan, President Barack Obama’s signature measure to curb emissions from coal-fired power plants, likely would require three years. Trump’s budget, which would slash funding for climate research and assistance to cities preparing for weatherrel­ated calamities, needs approval from Congress, where resistance is strong.

Still, the sharp change in course is being felt in ways large and small, down to the scrubbing of climate change informatio­n from federal agency websites. Even some Republican­s are taken aback.

“This is a repudiatio­n of 45 years of steady improvemen­t in the enforcemen­t and rigor of laws to protect the environmen­t in the U.S.,” said William Reilly, who led the EPA under President George H.W. Bush.

Trump’s administra­tion reversed Obama’s moratorium on leasing federal lands for coal mining, joined with Congress to kill protection­s of streams from coal mining waste, stopped tracking the federal government’s carbon emissions and withdrew a requiremen­t for more emissions data from oil and gas facilities.

Trump is hardly the first president accused of favoring businesses over the environmen­t. His belief in easing the regulatory burden on them is firmly in the Republican mainstream. What sets him apart is his zealousnes­s and public dismissive­ness of the scientific evidence showing the Earth is warming and man-made carbon emissions are largely to blame.

“This is more extreme than any previous Republican president — this is their old set of sentiments on steroids,” said David Doniger, a senior attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council.

 ?? Branden Camp / Associated Press ?? The Plant Scherer near Juliette, Ga., is a coal-fired power plant that is one of the nation’s top carbon dioxide emitters.
Branden Camp / Associated Press The Plant Scherer near Juliette, Ga., is a coal-fired power plant that is one of the nation’s top carbon dioxide emitters.

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