The Denver Post

Message to world leaders: Ignore

Bloomberg says not to follow Trump’s lead on climate change.

- By Steve Peoples

new york» New York billionair­e Michael Bloomberg urged world leaders not to follow President Donald Trump’s lead on climate change and declared his intention to help save an internatio­nal agreement to reduce carbon emissions.

Bloomberg, who considered a presidenti­al bid after serving three terms as New York City’s mayor, addressed his intensifyi­ng focus on climate change in an interview with The Associated Press. He said there was no political motive tied to last week’s release of his new book, “Climate of Hope: How Cities, Businesses, and Citizens Can Save the Planet,” co-authored by former Sierra Club executive director Carl Pope.

Instead of helping to reignite his political career, he said the new book offered a specific policy objective: to help save an internatio­nal agreement, negotiated in Paris, to reduce global carbon emissions.

The Trump administra­tion is debating whether to abandon the pact as the president promised during his campaign. Under the agreement, the U.S. pledged that by 2025 it would reduce its annual greenhouse gas emissions by 26 to 28 percent below 2005 levels, which would be a reduction of about 1.6 billion tons.

Bloomberg said he believed the U.S. would hit that goal regardless of what Trump does because of leadership at the state level and market forces already at play in the private sector.

“Washington won’t determine the fate of our ability to meet our Paris commitment,” he said in an email Saturday to the AP. “And what a tragedy it would be if the failure to understand that led to an unraveling of the agreement.”

Bloomberg already plays a significan­t role in shaping some of the nation’s fiercest policy debates, having invested millions of dollars in one advocacy group that pushes for stronger gun control and another that promotes liberal immigratio­n policies.

In the interview, Bloomberg shrugged off conservati­ves who condemn him as a paternalis­tic New York elitist. He noted that policies he helped initiate in New York City — including a smoking ban and high taxes on sugary drinks — have eventually caught on elsewhere.

In his new focus on climate change, Bloomberg directs particular­ly aggressive language at the coal industry.

“I don’t have much sympathy for industries whose products leave behind a trail of diseased and dead bodies,” he wrote in the book.

Saying that coal miners “have paid a terrible price,” Bloomberg also disclosed plans to donate $3 million to organizati­ons that help unemployed miners and their communitie­s find new economic opportunit­ies.

He avoided condemning the Trump administra­tion directly, however, largely casting the new president’s steps on climate change as irrelevant.

The White House declined to comment when asked about Bloomberg’s statements.

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