Trump to sign order
sweeping away Obama-era climate policies
Send a link to a friend
[March 28, 2017]
By Valerie Volcovici and Timothy Gardner
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump will sign an executive order on
Tuesday to undo a slew of Obama-era climate change regulations, a move
meant to bolster domestic energy production and create jobs, but
environmentalists say the order is dangerous and vow to challenge it in
court.
The decree's main target is former President Barack Obama's Clean Power
Plan, requiring states to slash carbon emissions from power plants - a
critical element in helping the United States meet its commitments to a
global climate change accord reached by nearly 200 countries in Paris in
December 2015.
The order will also rescind a ban on coal leasing on federal lands,
reverse rules to curb methane emissions from oil and gas production, and
reduce the weight of climate change in federal assessments of new
regulations.
Trump has long telegraphed the moves, and claimed that undoing green
regulation will trigger a new boom in oil, gas, and coal production and
create thousands of jobs, all without harming U.S. air and water
quality.
"We're going to go in a different direction," a senior White House
official told reporters ahead of Tuesday's order. "The previous
administration devalued workers with their policies. We can protect the
environment while providing people with work."
Energy analysts and executives have questioned whether the moves will
have a big effect on their industries, and environmentalists have called
them reckless.
"I cannot tell you how many jobs the executive order is going to create
but I can tell you that it provides confidence in this administration’s
commitment to the coal industry," Kentucky Coal Association president
Tyler White told Reuters.
Trump will sign the order at the Environmental Protection Agency with
Administrator Scott Pruitt, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke and Energy
Secretary Rick Perry on Tuesday afternoon.
The wide-ranging order is the boldest yet in Trump’s broader push to cut
environmental regulation to revive the drilling and mining industries, a
promise he made repeatedly during the presidential campaign.
'ASSAULT ON AMERICAN VALUES'
Environmental groups hurled scorn on Trump's order.
"These actions are an assault on American values and they endanger the
health, safety and prosperity of every American," said billionaire
environmental activist Tom Steyer, the head of activist group NextGen
Climate.
Green group Earthjustice was one of many organizations that said it will
fight the order both in and out of court. “This order ignores the law
and scientific reality," said its president, Trip Van Noppen.
[to top of second column] |
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a bill signing event in
the Roosevelt room of the White House in Washington, U.S., March 27,
2017. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
An overwhelming majority of scientists believe that human use of oil and
coal for energy is a main driver of climate change, causing a damaging
rise in sea levels, droughts, and more frequent violent storms.
Trump and several members of his administration, however, have doubts
about climate change, and Trump promised during his campaign to pull the
United States out of the Paris climate accord, arguing it would hurt
U.S. business.
Since being elected Trump has been mum on the Paris deal and the
executive order does not address it.
Christiana Figueres, former executive secretary of the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change who helped broker the Paris
accord, lamented Trump's order.
"The action by the U.S. to undo important domestic carbon reduction
regulation in the face of the enormous momentum building globally toward
a low carbon economy risks putting the country on a back-foot at a time
when most Americans are looking to lead," she said in a statement.
"Trying to make fossil fuels remain competitive in the face of a booming
clean renewable power sector, with the clean air and plentiful jobs it
continues to generate, is going against the flow of economics," she
said.
The order will direct the EPA to start a formal "review" process to undo
the Clean Power Plan, which was introduced by Obama in 2014 but was
never implemented in part because of legal challenges brought by
Republican-controlled states.
The Clean Power Plan required states to collectively cut carbon
emissions from power plants by 32 percent below 2005 levels by 2030.
Trump’s order lifts the Interior Department's Bureau of Land
Management's temporary ban on coal leasing on federal property put in
place by Obama in 2016 as part of a review to study the program's impact
on climate change and ensure royalty revenues were fair to taxpayers.
It also asks federal agencies to discount the cost of carbon in policy
decisions and the weight of climate change considerations in
infrastructure permitting, and reverses rules limiting methane leakage
from oil and gas facilities.
(Writing by Richard Valdmanis; Editing by Mary Milliken and Jeffrey
Benkoe)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |