The Borneo Post

US will lag as global climate action marches on, says former agency head

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NEW YORK: The United States is falling behind as the rest of the world marches on toward cl imate act ion, the former head of the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency ( EPA) said on Thursday.

Proposed cuts to the US federal agency will hamper its work while other nations are tackling climate change by cutting carbon emissions, said Lisa Jackson, speaking at a conference in New York.

“Because I worked 25 years at the EPA, I sure would like to see EPA at the front of the parade,” she said. “But the parade is not going to stop if the EPA is dragged to the back.”

Of those 25 years, Jackson was EPA administra­tor from 2009 to 2013 under former President Barack Obama.

Jackson spearheade­d the agency’s crackdown on carbon dioxide emissions by declaring that the greenhouse gas endangered public health, giving the EPA the authority to regulate CO2 emissions from mobile and stationary sources.

That legacy is under threat by President Donald Trump, a climate change doubter, who appointed former Oklahoma Attorney- General Scott Pruitt, a long-time foe of the EPA, to run the agency.

Pruitt, who has cast doubts on the science of climate change, has said the EPA should not regulate CO2 without a law passed by Congress authorisin­g it to do so.

Trump also proposed last month a 31 per cent cut to the EPA’s budget, eliminatin­g its climate change programmes and t r imming b ack c or e initiative­s.

Jackson, now a vice- president at US tech giant Apple, said at the event organised by Columbia University that it has become the responsibi­lity of businesses to innovate with policies to limit greenhouse gases and adopt clean energy sources.

“Al l of us must re- double ourselves,” she said.

“I just don’t see why we would cede the clean energy space to other economies, who are going to make a tonne of money and create a tonne of jobs while we sort of re- arrange the parade.” — Reuters

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