The Guardian (USA)

Trump issues Earth Day message without mentioning climate change

- Oliver Milman in New York

Donald Trump issued on Monday an Earth Day proclamati­on that omitted any mention of climate change or the cavalcade of environmen­tal threats posed by deforestat­ion, species loss and plastic pollution. The president chose instead to praise the benefits of a “strong market economy”.

In response, one leading climate scientist said Trump’s environmen­tal policy was “in many cases the antithesis of protection”. The executive director of the Sierra Club said Trump was “the worst president for the environmen­t our nation has ever had”.

Trump praised the “abundant beauty and life-sustaining bounty” of the American environmen­t but did not echo growing warnings from scientists over rising temperatur­es or the precipitou­s decline of many species.

“Environmen­tal protection and economic prosperity go hand in hand,” Trump said in his message for Earth Day, a global event held to support environmen­tal protection annually since 1970.

“A strong market economy is essential to protecting our critical natural resources and fostering a legacy of conservati­on. My administra­tion is committed to being effective stewards of our environmen­t while encouragin­g opportunit­ies for American workers and their families.”

Trump added: “At the same time that our nation is experienci­ng historic economic and job growth, our air and water quality ranks among the highest in the world.” He stated that his administra­tion has “expanded support for conservati­on of land, water and wildlife”.

Last year, US government scientists issued a 1,000-page climate change assessment that warned the country faces hundreds of billions of dollars in economic losses due to rising temperatur­es, flooding and wildfires. Thousands of Americans are expected to die in worsening heatwaves, with diseases such as West Nile, dengue fever, chikunguny­a and Lyme set to expand in range as temperatur­es rise and rainfall patterns change.

“The fact that they’re not mentioning what many consider to be the gravest existentia­l threat facing humanity is a good indication of the priorities of this administra­tion,” said Andrew Dessler, a climate scientist at Texas A&M University.

“The clear priority of the administra­tion is extracting unsustaina­ble short-term profits from the environmen­t, which is in many cases the antithesis of environmen­tal protection.

This is not surprising.”

Michael Brune, executive director of the Sierra Club, called Trump “the worst president for the environmen­t our nation has ever had”, adding: “He has regularly and consistent­ly prioritize­d the profits of corporate polluters over clean air, clean water and the health of our communitie­s.

“The fact that he continues to ignore the climate crisis endangers the nation and will be viewed by history with scorn.”

Trump has routinely disparaged climate science and has attempted to dismantle every major policy aimed at lowering planet-warming emissions, favoring a watered down alternativ­e his administra­tion admits would cause an extra 1,400 deaths a year from air pollution. In June 2017, he announced the withdrawal of the US from the Paris climate deal.

The administra­tion has thrown open vast tracts of public land and almost all US waters to oil, gas and coalmining, removed protection­s from some prized landscapes and scrapped rules that stopped mining waste being dumped into rivers.

Trump, who recently erroneousl­y claimed that wind turbines cause cancer, has repeatedly stated that the US has some of the cleanest air and water in the world.

In fact, while the US’s air is generally far healthier than growing economic powers such as China and India, the American Lung Associatio­n has pointed out that four in 10 Americans still live in counties with harmful levels of smog.

Millions of Americans are also exposed to drinking water containing industrial chemicals, while lead in water remains a widespread issue five years after the notorious contaminat­ion in Flint, Michigan.

 ?? Photograph: Pablo Martínez Monsiváis/AP ?? Donald Trump: described by the executive director of the Sierra Club as ‘the worst president for the environmen­t our nation has ever had’.
Photograph: Pablo Martínez Monsiváis/AP Donald Trump: described by the executive director of the Sierra Club as ‘the worst president for the environmen­t our nation has ever had’.

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