http://thewire.in/83925/trump-climate-nyt-denial/

ENVIRONMENT

On Climate Change, Donald Trump Has No Clue What He Is Talking About

BY NAGRAJ ADVE ON 02/12/2016

No one should be surprised about Trump being a sceptic. But what
leaves one startled is how poorly informed his scepticism is.

Much has been made in the Indian media about the US President-elect
Donald Trump’s supposed changed stance towards global warming and the
Paris Agreement on climate change. His stand during the presidential
campaign had been that he would pull the US out of the Paris
Agreement. But when queried about climate change in the course of a
long interaction with the editors and senior columnists of the New
York Times at their office on November 23, Trump is believed to have
said he has “an open mind to it”.

On reading the transcript of the interaction in detail, one hardly
gets a sense, contrary to what has been reported in India and what may
now be the perception of many, that he is open about the issue. Two
things in fact stand out: one, and most glaring, how sceptical Donald
Trump is about global warming. Even while he says he has an open mind
– he uses the term six times – the patchy information he spouts is one
of a sceptic. Two, his scepticism is not a healthy, informed
scepticism but one based on lazy, lamentable ignorance.

Open or closed?

Answering the only direct question, put to him by Michael Shear, the
White House correspondent of NYT, about whether he would pull out of
the Paris Agreement, Trump’s reply was, “I am going to look at it.”
This is completely ambiguous, to say the least. When questioned about
what would happen if other governments impose tariffs on American
goods were the US to withdraw from the Paris Agreement, Trump’s
response was, “They are in no position to do that to us, no matter
what I do. But I am going to take a look at it … I want to also see
how much this is costing.”

This ambiguity needs to be read along with the other things Trump said
about climate change. Having an open mind would suggest he is open to
another point of view, but there’s nothing he said that tells us what
that is. “There are few things,” he said in response to a question
from the columnist Thomas Friedman about how the President-elect would
approach climate change, “where there’s more division than climate
change,” implying that there are people who think differently about
the subject from Friedman and the New York Times. “There are people on
the other side of the issue,” making the point more explicitly, “a lot
of smart people disagree with you.”

At this point, Arthur Sulzberger, the newspaper’s publisher, stepped
in with a tangible issue and asked – presumably referring to
hurricanes along the US east coast – “We saw what these storms are now
doing, right? We’ve seen it personally.”

“We have had storms always, Arthur,” said Trump.

“Not like this,” Sulzberger replied.

The discussion then moved on to issues about wind power, which reveals
Trump’s skewed mindset about renewables. Wind, let’s bear in mind,
currently comprises a fifth of the renewable energy consumed in the
US, three times more than solar power. “I have a problem with wind …
Wind is a very deceiving thing … Windmills need massive subsidies, for
the most part they don’t work. I don’t think they work at all without
subsidy.” That’s not entirely true – with wind power in the US proving
increasingly competitive even without government subsidy. What’s more,
Trump is blind, or perhaps wilfully oblivious, to the subsidies that
fossil fuels benefit from. According to a recent working paper drawn
up by the International Monetary Fund, the overall energy subsidy
worldwide amounted to $5.3 trillion last year, or over $10 million
every minute. But “I wouldn’t want to subsidise wind,” says Trump.

Weather v. climate

No one should be surprised about Trump being a sceptic. But what left
this author startled on reading the transcript, was how poorly
informed his scepticism is.

It’s been widely reported that Trump said there was “some
connectivity” between human activity and climate change. What he also
said was: “There is some, something. It depends on how much.” His
earlier stated position was so daft: he is believed to have called
climate change “a Chinese hoax” – that something as tepid as “some
connectivity” seems a giant leap for Trumpkind. That human beings
adding carbon dioxide to the atmosphere causes the globe to warm has
been established science for a hundred and twenty years, ever since
the Swedish chemist Svante Arrhenius published a scientific paper
about it in April 1896. That human activity is responsible for global
warming has been told us for years in report after report from the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Clearly, Trump has some
catching up to do.

The editors of the NYT and the President-elect were having this
conversation on a day and at a time when the temperature at the North
Pole has been a jaw-dropping 20º C warmer than it should be at this
time of year. Arctic ice has been melting and in long-term decline for
the last 40 years. “There is nothing but climate change that can cause
these trends,” says a professor at Rutgers University, New Jersey, who
studies the Arctic. But meanwhile, Trump has merely this to say to the
NYT: “It’s a very complex subject. I’m not sure anybody is ever going
to really know.”

He goes on: “You know the hottest day ever was in 1890-something, ’98.
You can make a lot of cases for different views.” He has no clue what
he is talking about. If he is referring to a single hottest day, it is
irrelevant because random temperature spikes are perfectly possible as
natural variation and may have nothing to do with global warming. What
matters are trends, and the long-term trends are and have been
upwards, as the World Meteorological Organisation’s temperature data
has revealed for years.

Since he mentions ‘98’, he is presumably referring not to a “hottest
day” but to the year 1998, dredging up what is by now discredited
climate sceptic argument. Global temperatures had shot up in 1998 –
due to what was then the strongest El Nino of the 20th century – and
then flattened out for over a decade thereafter, referred to in the
climate science literature as a ‘hiatus’ in warming. This flattening
is used by climate sceptics to question the basic science of global
warming, which Trump is parroting.

There are varied explanations for this hiatus in the scientific
community, the most widely-held being that much of the excess heat
trapped during those years went into the deep oceans. And even in this
period of relatively flat growth, average global temperatures exceeded
1998’s record in 2005, 2010, 2014 and 2015. This year, 2016, will end
up as the hottest year ever, the third year in a row – something that
has never happened before. Every single month this year has been the
hottest respective month ever recorded since 1880.

But none of this seems to have made any impression on the man who is
going to be President of the United States in less than eight weeks.
One could be hopeful about someone with a genuinely open mind. But one
also feels extremely pessimistic about Trump; he is ignorant and is
surrounding himself with people who are themselves hostile to climate
science. The latest report coming out of the US suggests that he will
strangle funding for climate research at NASA’s world-renowned Earth
Sciences Division, which studies the planet from “the unique
perspective of space”. Serious climate scientists are alarmed.

Michael Mann has said, “Without the support of NASA, not only the US
but the entire world would be taking a hard hit when it comes to
understanding the behaviour of our climate and the threats posed by
human-caused climate change.” For us to assume that Trump has an open
mind – just because he says so himself – would be unforgivable naïveté
on our part. Let’s focus on what he does. And so far the signs aren’t
good.

Nagraj Adve is a member of India Climate Justice. He works and writes
on issues related to global warming.

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Peace Is Doable

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