Los Angeles Times

To protect or abandon the environmen­t?

President Trump enables more pollution and warming while Joe Biden calls for a dramatic shift.

- T’s fitting that

IPresident Trump invoked an interstate highway expansion in Atlanta last week to announce final rules that, if they survive the inevitable legal challenges, will undermine one of the nation’s bedrock environmen­tal laws, the National Environmen­tal Policy Act. American voters face a fork in their own road this November — stay on the Trump expressway to environmen­tal degradatio­n and catastroph­ic climate change, or shift to the road, bumpy as it may be, to a cleaner environmen­t and more sustainabl­e future of wind, solar and other energy sources that do not involve burning fossil fuels.

The COVID-19 pandemic understand­ably has seized the nation’s attention, but that hasn’t lessened the risk we all face from air and water pollution and carbon-fed global warming. Trump has unabashedl­y sought to dismantle federal regulatory structures to speed up constructi­on projects while forging a national energy plan based on producing and burning fossil fuels.

His embrace of the oil, gas and coal industries defies the global scientific consensus that burning fossil fuels emits greenhouse gases that make the Earth less habitable by warming the atmosphere, feeding stronger and more frequent storms, triggering devastatin­g droughts and pushing up sea levels. In fact, the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion reported last week that unusually high tides led to record flooding among one-quarter of Atlantic and Gulf Coast communitie­s where the agency maintains tide gauges. Climate change is no dystopian vision of the future; it is here.

Trump’s efforts to eviscerate regulatory oversight of the environmen­t is rooted in his belief that regulation­s are for the most part unnecessar­y hurdles to economic progress. He bewails the amount of time and money it takes for projects to clear environmen­tal reviews and related challenges.

To be honest, he may have something there. NEPA came into being five decades ago — signed into law by President Nixon — and it’s not out of line to suspect that there are places where the law and the regulation­s that arose from it could use some reasonable revising. But Trump and his industryco­nnected advisors are not the ones to trust with such a task.

These new rules are not reasoned updates. By requiring environmen­tal impact analyses to be completed within two years (now they often take twice that), the administra­tion seeks to cut short the considerat­ion of those most affected by major projects — often people of color and low-income households — and disarm environmen­tal activists. The rules also would require regulators to no longer weigh the cumulative effects of a proposed project and limit their review to effects “that are reasonably foreseeabl­e” and “have a close causal relationsh­ip” to the work being done. So, for example, a proposed project’s emissions could not be added to those of other nearby emitters to determine whether their cumulative impact creates an excessive burden on a specific community.

Separately, the Government Accountabi­lity Office reported last week that the administra­tion tweaked the formula for measuring the “social cost of carbon” so that estimates of the potential harm from emissions are seven times lower than they used to be. It’s foolhardy — and dangerous — to look at environmen­tal impacts through such a narrow lens.

Meanwhile, presumptiv­e Democratic nominee Joe Biden, after lengthy negotiatio­ns with progressiv­e environmen­talists who had backed Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), released a $2-trillion plan for quickly shifting the nation from its reliance on fossil fuels to renewable sources.

It’s not the controvers­ial “Green New Deal” that progressiv­es have been pushing, but it’s in the neighborho­od. Getting such a measure through Congress even if both chambers were controlled by Democrats would be no easy task, but Biden’s proposal at least recognizes the dire future we all face if the nation — and the world — do not fundamenta­lly alter how we produce and consume energy.

The world cannot afford to backslide on environmen­tal protection­s and the all-important fight to mitigate the worst effects of climate change. Yes, jobs are important, but survival more so. The errors and consequenc­es of the past are crystal clear. The question is, will we heed those lessons?

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