USA TODAY International Edition

Opposing view: We're right to get out of this bad deal

- John Barrasso Sen. John Barrasso, R- Wyo., is chairman of the Committee on Environmen­t and Public Works and a member of the Committee on Foreign Relations.

President Donald Trump is keeping his word and getting America out of a bad deal.

The poorly negotiated Paris climate accord imposed unfair, unworkable and unrealisti­c targets on the United States for reducing carbon emissions.

As the climate deal punished America’s energy producers with expensive and burdensome regulation­s, it gave other countries U. S. taxpayer- funded subsidies and generous timelines.

Countries like China got a free pass to pollute for over a decade. With abundant low- cost coal, China and India would put our manufactur­ers at a huge competitiv­e disadvanta­ge. Economic costs would be severe.

According to the National Economic Research Associates, if we met all of our commitment­s as part of the Paris climate agreement, it would cost the American economy $ 3 trillion and 6.5 million industrial sector jobs by 2040. We don’t need to cripple our economy to protect our environmen­t.

America’s emissions actually continue to decline, and we are the world’s driver of innovative solutions. Since 2005, the United States has reduced its combustion- related carbon dioxide emissions more than any other nation in the world.

Global emissions have moved in the opposite direction.

Our reduction in emissions was largely from new and innovative technologi­es from the private sector — not internatio­nal agreements or punishing regulation­s.

Groundbrea­king research into carbon capture technologi­es and advanced nuclear reactors hold the key to continued emissions reductions.

American free- market innovation can address a changing climate.

We all want cleaner air, but the Paris climate agreement, and the regulation­s that would come with it, put America at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge with the rest of the world.

This was a bad deal. The president is right to get us out of it.

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