Bloomberg
Donald Trump is preparing a novel campaign strategy for a president who is pulling the US from the international Paris accord on climate change, cheer-leading for coal, one of the dirtiest source of power, and suggesting that wind turbines cause cancer.
He’s going to tout his environmental credentials. Administration officials are developing talking points on climate change and cultivating a list of environmental “success stories,†from cleaner air to reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, said a person familiar with the plans who asked not to be named describing internal deliberations.
“President Trump believes you can grow the economy and protect the environment,†said Judd Deere, a deputy White House press secretary.
In attempting to demonstrate that the US is getting greener while still rolling back what Trump sees as job-killing constraints on industry, a key cheerleader may be Andrew Wheeler, administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency.
“Today we have the cleanest air on record, and we are ranked No. 1 in the world for access to clean drinking water,†Wheeler said at the Washington Auto Show on April 4. “As we continue to reduce pollution, we’re also reducing burdensome regulations.â€
CRYING FOUL
And Mandy Gunasekara, a former Trump EPA policy adviser, said that “if you look at the facts on the ground, President Trump has been one of the most successful presidents in advancing a pro-growth and pro-environment agenda.â€
Still, plans to cherry-pick examples of Trump’s “green†accomplishments to take to voters already has environmental activists crying foul.
“They’re whitewashing their sooty record,†said David Doniger, a senior adviser to the NRDC Action Fund, an affiliate of the Natural Resources Defense Council. “They’re taking credit for the law and the actions of their predecessors that they’re actively trying to roll back.â€
The strategy ignores Trump’s zeal to ease environmental regulations he says are hampering US growth. But it’s also is a tacit recognition of the political reality confronting the president as he seeks re-election: many of the swing voters Trump needs to win a second term in the White House also prize environmental progress.
“For the president to win these battleground states, he’s going to have to have some record of environmental achievement to showcase,†said David Banks, who previously advised Trump on the issues. “The environment and environmental issues can make or break you.â€
Environmental activists say the administration cynically plans to take credit for achievements driven by policies put in place by his predecessors — including regulations his agencies are now attempting to undermine or overturn.
Within months of taking office, Trump tasked the EPA with redoing the Obama-era Clean Power Plan that aimed to slash greenhouse gas emissions from the nation’s power plants, and directed the Interior Department to resume selling coal on federal land, ending a moratorium imposed by former President Barack Obama. The agency is also easing Obama-era limits on methane from oil wells and standards throttling greenhouse gas emissions from automobiles.
But supporters say Trump has environmental achievements to celebrate too. “Deregulation does not always mean rolling back rules,†said Wheeler. By modernising, simplifying or streamlining regulations, the administration is creating “greater certainty†and empowering the public “to innovate and create cleaner and safer technologies,â€
Wheeler noted that from 1970 to 2017, conventional air pollution in the US fell 73 percent, even as the economy grew more than 260 percent, Americans traveled more miles, and the US used more energy.
The Trump administration can also point to expanding use of natural gas, both domestically and exported overseas, where it can displace more carbon-intense energy sources. “That is a pretty substantial story that they can tell, not only about our decarbonising in the US power sector, but also globally, sharing those technologies around the world,†said Rich Powell, executive director of ClearPath Action, a group seeking to accelerate clean energy innovation.