Yuma Sun

Decision day

Trump to reveal fate of U.S. in climate agreement

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump says he will announce his decision on whether to pull the United States out of the Paris climate accord during a Rose Garden event Thursday afternoon.

Trump promoted his announceme­nt Wednesday night on Twitter, after a day in which U.S. allies around the world sounded alarms about the likely consequenc­es of a U.S. withdrawal. Trump himself kept everyone in suspense, saying he was still listening to “a lot of people both ways.”

The White House signaled that Trump was likely to decide on exiting the global pact — fulfilling one of his principal campaign pledges — though top aides were divided. And the final decision may not be entirely clear-cut: Aides were still deliberati­ng on “caveats in the language,” one official said.

Everyone cautioned that no decision was final until Trump announced it. The president has been known to change his thinking on major decisions and tends to seek counsel from both inside and outside advisers, many with differing agendas, until the last minute.

Abandoning the pact would isolate the U.S. from a raft of internatio­nal allies who spent years negotiatin­g the 2015 agreement to fight global warming and pollution by reducing carbon emissions in nearly 200 nations. While traveling abroad last week, Trump was repeatedly pressed to stay in the deal by European leaders and the Vatican. Withdrawin­g would leave the United States aligned only with Russia among the world’s industrial­ized economies.

American corporate leaders have also appealed to the businessma­n-turned-president to stay. They include Apple, Google and Walmart. Even fossil fuel companies such as Exxon Mobil, BP and Shell say the United States should abide by the deal.

Trump’s predecesso­r Barack Obama enacted the deal without U.S. Senate ratificati­on. A formal withdrawal would take years, experts say, a situation that led the president of the European Commission to speak dismissive­ly of Trump on Wednesday.

Trump doesn’t “comprehens­ively understand” the terms of the accord, though European leaders tried to explain the process for withdrawin­g to him “in clear, simple sentences” during summit meetings last week, Jean-Claude Juncker said in Berlin. “It looks like that attempt failed,” Juncker said. “This notion, ‘I am Trump, I am American, America first and I am getting out,’ that is not going to happen.”

Some of Trump’s aides have been searching for a middle ground — perhaps by renegotiat­ing the terms of the agreement — in an effort to thread the needle between his base of supporters who oppose the deal and those warning that a U.S. exit would deal a blow to the fight against global warming as well as to worldwide U.S. leadership.

News of Trump’s expected decision drew swift reaction from the United Nations. The organizati­on’s main Twitter page quoted Secretary-General Antonio Guterres as saying, “Climate change is undeniable. Climate change is unstoppabl­e. Climate solutions provide opportunit­ies that are unmatchabl­e.”

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