close
This photograph shows the dried Yovkovtsi dam, near the town of Elena, Central Bulgaria on November 08, 2024. --AFP
This photograph shows the dried Yovkovtsi dam, near the town of Elena, Central Bulgaria on November 08, 2024. --AFP

Trump prepares to withdraw from Paris climate agreement, says NYT

Biden’s Amazon visit comes as US climate policy to shift under Trump

WASHINGTON: US President-elect Donald Trump’s transition team has prepared executive orders and proclamations on withdrawing from the Paris climate agreement and shrinking the size of some national monuments to allow more drilling and mining, the New York Times reported on Friday. Trump is also expected to end the pause on permitting new liquefied natural gas exports to big markets in Asia and Europe and revoke a waiver that allows California and other states to have tighter pollution standards, according to the report.

Trump promised during his campaign to take many of the actions listed in the report. Karoline Leavitt, a spokeswoman for the Trump transition team, said in a response to a Reuters request that the results of Tuesday’s election gave him a “mandate to implement the promises he made on the campaign trail. He will deliver.”

The administration of President Joe Biden paused approvals of new LNG exports in January in order to complete a study on the environmental and economic impact of the exports. The US Energy Department will have a draft updated analysis out for a 60-day public comment period before the end of the year, a department official said. Some people on the transition team are discussing moving the headquarters of the Environmental Protection Agency out of Washington, the report said, citing unnamed people involved in the discussions.

Joe Biden will become the first sitting US president to visit the Brazilian Amazon when he travels to Manaus later this month, a symbolic trip given the United States is likely to see a dramatic change in climate policy under President-elect Donald Trump. The White House confirmed late on Thursday that Biden had included a visit to Manaus, a city of two million people in the heart of the world’s largest rainforest, to his South American tour of Brazil and Peru between Nov 14 and 19.

Reuters had first reported last month that Biden was expected to make it to the rainforest ahead of a G20 summit in Rio de Janeiro, where he will meet with Brazilian counterpart Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

“In Manaus, President Biden will visit the Amazon rainforest to engage with local, indigenous, and other leaders working to preserve and protect this critical ecosystem,” the White House said in a statement. Scientists consider the Amazon’s protection vital to curbing climate change because of the vast amount of climate-warming carbon dioxide its trees absorb. Leftist Lula has pledged to end deforestation in the area by 2030. Biden and Lula have seen eye to eye when it comes to climate policy. The Democrat last year pledged to request $500 million from the US Congress to support the Brazilian-administered Amazon Fund. Things, however, should change dramatically when Trump returns to power in January. The Republican has called climate change a hoax and said he plans to withdraw the US from the landmark 2015 Paris Agreement on climate.

Trump’s policies are seen as closer to those of Brazil’s former far-right President Jair Bolsonaro, who has been called “Trump of the tropics” and rolled back environmental protections during his 2019-2022 term. Lula earlier this week congratulated Trump on his victory and said the world needed “dialogue and joint work”. He later had a call with Biden to discuss the US leader’s trip to Brazil.

“Lula reiterated his friendship and admiration for President Biden and highlighted the strong state of Brazil-US relations in recent years,” Lula’s office said. “They both highlighted the closeness of priorities between the two governments on promoting the energy transition.” Biden’s visit to the Amazon follows a similar trip by French President Emmanuel Macron, who was in the rainforest in March. Brazil will host the COP30 climate summit in Belem next year. — Reuters

By Dr Nermin Al-Houti We start our column with the question: Why was military education at schools cancelled? I started my column with this question due to the need of our society to bring back military service or military education, as it was calle...
We are afflicted in this age by the disease of social media, a plague that leaves the rational person bewildered. After the initial shock that lasted for years, the world is starting to realize the powerful influence of these platforms. Superpowers ...
MORE STORIES