Donald Trump backs away from vow to pull out of the Paris climate agreement

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
36,362
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Vancouver Island
Heeeeeere comes the Salt-Right..


Donald Trump backs away from vow to pull out of the Paris climate agreement

U.S. President-elect Donald Trump said on Tuesday he was keeping an open mind on whether to pull out of a landmark international accord to fight climate change, in a softening of his stance toward global warming.

Trump told the New York Times in an interview that he thinks there is “some connectivity” between human activity and global warming, despite previously describing climate change as a hoax.

A source on Trump’s transition team told Reuters earlier this month that the New York businessman was seeking quick ways to withdraw the United States from the 2015 Paris Agreement to combat climate change.

But asked on Tuesday whether the United States would withdraw from the accord, the Republican said: “I’m looking at it very closely. I have an open mind to it.”

A U.S. withdrawal from the pact, agreed to by almost 200 countries, would set back international efforts to limit rising temperatures that have been linked to the extinctions of animals and plants, heat waves, floods and rising sea levels. .

Trump, who takes office on Jan. 20, also said he was thinking about climate change and American competitiveness and “how much it will cost our companies,” he said, according to a tweet by a Times reporter in the interview.

Two people advising Trump’s transition team on energy and environment issues said they were caught off guard by his remarks.

A shift on global warming is the latest sign Trump might be backing away from some of his campaign rhetoric as life in the Oval Office approaches.

Trump has said he might have to build a fence, rather than a wall, in some areas of the U.S.-Mexican border to stop illegal immigration, tweaking one of his signature campaign promises.

Also in Tuesday’s interview, he showed little appetite for pressing investigations of his Democratic rival in the presidential campaign, Hillary Clinton.

Donald Trump backs away from vow to pull out of the Paris climate agreement - National | Globalnews.ca

Looks like yet another one you called wrong.

Why is there a background??

Where?
 

Danbones

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 23, 2015
24,505
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Oh Gawd another 'illary will win thread
;)
I am surprised she didn't list global warming as a cause of her losing the selection
 

Twila

Nanah Potato
Mar 26, 2003
14,698
73
48
Why would I argue with what you just said?

Perfect statement.

....and no....I don't know.

Who knows?...this guy.

Love him.....daily snickers.;-)

I don't want you to argue with me. I want you tell me what you think, what you know and what you think you know.

I am looking foward to the future and seeing how this whole thing ends.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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Coffee House

Donald Trump is right to ditch the Paris Agreement

Rupert Darwall




Rupert Darwall
2 June 2017
The Spectator

Yesterday’s announcement by Donald Trump that the United States is withdrawing from the Paris Agreement is truly historic. The Paris accord was the closest the Europeans had come to getting the US to accepting timetabled emissions cuts in the now quarter century saga of UN climate change talks. The first was in the 1992 UN climate change convention itself, rebuffed by George H.W. Bush; the second was in the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, signed by the Clinton Administration, effectively vetoed by the Senate and repudiated by George W. Bush. Now, Donald Trump has dashed their hopes for a third and possibly final time. It’s understandable that the European reaction is one of fury and outrage.

In fact, Trump offered the Europeans an olive branch in renegotiating Paris or negotiating a new agreement. But within minutes of the president’s announcement, the leaders of Germany, France and Italy slammed the door shut on that, stating their belief that the agreement ‘cannot be renegotiated’. Brief though the rejection was, it is replete with the pigs-might-fly economics that characterises climate policy: imposing costs on the present creates opportunities for growth and prosperity, then pledging to compensate developing countries for slowing down their emissions. If cutting emissions creates wealth, why the need for hundreds of billions of dollars of climate finance?

In this respect, President Trump has a surer grasp of the economic realities than the Europeans. The United States is now the world’s hydrocarbon superpower. Thanks to fracking, it has surpassed Saudi Arabia and Russia to become the world’s top energy producer. This abundance of hydrocarbon energy made the US the biggest loser from the Paris Agreement. Quitting Paris turns the US into the biggest winner from Paris – its access to cheap energy giving it a colossal competitive advantage in world markets as other nations increasingly burden themselves with high cost, unreliable wind and solar capacity.

Sanctimonious Europeans parading their moral superiority overlook Germany’s dirty carbon secret. The fall in German power stations’ emissions has stalled even as wind and solar capacity has increased. When Germany’s Energiewende first started, the Green energy minister promised it would cost the equivalent of a scoop of ice cream on monthly energy bills. A decade later, his Christian Democrat successor reckoned the cost at up to one trillion euros by the end of the 2030s. Indeed, the big falls in carbon dioxide happened in the wake of German reunification (cost: €1.3 trillion), another reason why Angela Merkel should be sending a large cheque to NATO. If Europeans were truly motivated by concern about global warming, they would be extending the lives of their nuclear power stations and not bringing forward their closure, as Merkel is doing and President Macron looks likely to do with his appointment of the green activist and filmmaker Nicolas Hulot as energy minister.

Talk of America being cast into irrelevance by leaving the Paris Agreement ignores what happened after it rejected the Kyoto Protocol. By 2013 and the beginning of its second commitment period, the Kyoto Protocol had become an almost empty vehicle occupied mostly by Europeans and a handful of others. Post-Paris, America’s empty seat will become the most powerful seat as the US shows the rest of the world what energy freedom looks like, emboldening others to challenge climate policy orthodoxy. Prime among these is India, the other big loser from the Paris Agreement. With one fifth of the per capita electricity consumption of China, India’s electrification has a long way to go. As the world’s most populous country, India needs more coal-fired generating capacity, but reliance on solar and its destructive grid economics could set back Indian electrification for a generation.

Within the EU, the Visegrad Four (Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Hungary) are doing what they can to loosen the shackles of the EU’s Paris commitments. The wrangling arises because the EU’s commitment of a 40 per cent reduction on 1990 levels by 2030 is ‘to be fulfilled jointly’, individual targets not yet being parcelled out to member states. This leaves the UK in an interesting position: will the UK decide to be Good Europeans and impose even higher energy costs on its citizens and businesses or will it put the needs of the economy first?

Drilling of the Bowland shale formation, straddling the North West and South Yorkshire and containing 50 per cent more oil and gas than the two largest shale formations in the US, is about the start. There are also ample undersea reserves of coal under the North Sea. On this score, there is much to cheer in the Conservative manifesto with its commitment to fracking and its ambition that the UK should have the lowest energy costs in Europe. Perhaps that is why Angela Merkel bracketed the UK with the US in her post-G7 Taormina hissy fit about unreliable allies – a case of if it isn’t hurting, it isn’t working.



Rupert Darwall is the author of The Age of Global Warming: A History


https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2017/06/donald-trump-right-ditch-paris-agreement/