http://www.vox.com/2016/11/9/13571318/donald-trump-disaster-climate

There’s no way around it: Donald Trump is going to be a disaster for the planet

Updated by Brad Plumer@[email protected]  Nov 9, 2016, 3:43am EST

This is not a joke. (Shutterstock)

This is happening. Donald Trump is going to be president of the United States.

And there’s no way around it: What he’s planning to do looks like an
absolute disaster for the planet (and the people on it). Specifically,
all the fragile but important progress the world has made on global
warming over the past eight years is now in danger of being blown to
hell.

Trump has been crystal clear about his environmental plans. The
mainstream media never wanted to bring it up, never wanted to ask
about it in debates, never wanted to turn their addled attention away
from Hillary Clinton’s email servers to discuss what a Trump
presidency might mean for climate change. But all the indications were
there:

Trump called global warming a Chinese hoax. He couldn’t have been
blunter about this.
Trump has said, straight up, he wants to scrap all the major
regulations that President Obama painstakingly put in place to reduce
US carbon dioxide emissions, including the Clean Power Plan. With
Republicans controlling the House and Senate, he can easily do this.
Pass a bill and sign it. Done.

Trump has also hinted he wants to get rid of the Environmental
Protection Agency entirely. “What they do is a disgrace,” he has said.
If Congress agrees, he could readily scrap regulations on mercury
pollution, on smog, on coal ash, and more.

Trump has said he wants to repeal all federal spending on clean
energy, including R&D for wind, solar, nuclear power, and electric
vehicles. Again, with Congress at his side, this is totally doable.

Trump has said he wants to pull the United States out of the Paris
climate deal. There’s nothing stopping him. (Technically, the US can’t
officially withdraw for four years, but for all practical purposes,
the Trump administration could ignore it.)

If Trump follows through, these policies would mean more coal burning
in the United States, more air pollution, more carbon dioxide
emissions. Here’s how Lux Research modeled the impacts — Trump’s
policies would lead to an extra 3.4 billion tons of CO2 emissions
compared with Clinton’s proposals:


(Lux Research)
For the rest of the world, the impact could be seismic.

The world was making cautious progress on global warming. Trump wants
to blow that up.
Over the past eight years, the Obama administration has been using
every regulatory lever at its disposal to push down US carbon dioxide
emissions via executive actions. Obama has also been trying to coax
countries like China to participate in a global climate deal, under
which every country would voluntarily pledge to restrain its emissions
and meet regularly at the UN to ratchet up their ambitions over time.

That plan came to fruition last December, when the world agreed to a
sweeping climate agreement in Paris. The Paris deal was always
delicate, and the current pledges aren’t nearly enough to avoid
dangerous global warming, defined as 2°C or more. But the deal was a
start. And the hope was that by cooperating and exerting diplomatic
pressure on each other, all countries would steadily increase action
over time.

Now that’s imperiled. If Trump were to yank the United States out of
the Paris agreement, the deal wouldn’t die, but momentum could wane.
It’s easy to imagine China and India deciding they don’t need to push
nearly as hard on clean energy if the world’s richest and most
powerful country doesn’t care. At best, progress would slow. At worst,
the entire arrangement could collapse, and we set out on a path for
4°C warming or more.

These are decisions that will reverberate for thousands of years and
affect hundreds of millions of people. We can’t easily undo the
effects of all that extra carbon dioxide we keep putting into the air.
Without drastic reductions in emissions (or possibly risky
geoengineering), global temperatures will keep rising. The ice caps in
Greenland and Antarctica will keep melting. Once that process gets
underway, we can’t reverse it. The seas will rise. South Florida will
eventually vanish beneath the oceans. Megadroughts will become more
likely in the Southwest. For generations and generations.

This is the future of humanity. We’re at risk of departing from the
stable climatic conditions that sustained civilization for thousands
of years and lurching into the unknown. The world’s poorest countries,
in particular, are ill-equipped to handle this disruption.

So is there any hope things won’t actually be this bad?

Maybe? (Shutterstock)
That all said, there’s always, always reason for hope. Political
change unfolds in unexpected ways, and not everything on Earth
revolves around the machinations of the US federal government. So here
are a few reasons to think the fight against climate change is not yet
lost:

States like California and New York are still pursuing their own
ambitious climate policies, and it’s possible those efforts could be
so successful that other states decide to follow suit.
Likewise, wind power, solar power, and electric cars keep getting much
cheaper all around the world — it’s possible they’ll eventually
acquire an unstoppable momentum, even without federal support from the
US government. Or maybe some other new low-carbon technologies will
come along to shake up climate politics.

Climate activists will continue to push for action at local levels —
much as they did during the George W. Bush years, when the Sierra Club
began blocking a major planned expansion of coal power. It’s possible
that opposition to Trump will galvanize a new generation of climate
activists who find new, creative ways to address the problem.

Other countries still have their own reasons for tackling climate
change, even China and India (which, note, is choking on dangerous
levels of air pollution in Delhi right now). It’s possible that
Trump’s recalcitrance on climate change could motivate the rest of the
world to redouble their efforts at curtailing emissions without us.

Heck, it’s even possible that Trump and the GOP could have a change of
heart and decide that global warming is a real issue that needs to be
taken seriously. It’s possible that Republicans could balk at
repealing all these pollution regulations, realizing that they’re
actually quite popular. Stranger things have happened.

Lots of things are possible. Climate change will continue to be a
defining issue for generations, long after Donald Trump is gone — and
there’s never reason to give up altogether. But the landscape has
undeniably shifted. Right now Trump has given every indication that he
wants to gamble with the future of the only planet around that’s known
to support life. And what he wants to do is dangerous.



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Peace Is Doable

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