"Even for Pruitt, It's
Outrageous": EPA Chief Says US Should Exit Paris Deal
'Pulling out of the Paris
climate accord would damage the U.S. more than it damages the Paris agreement
or climate action globally'
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) chief Scott Pruitt on Thursday explicitly called for the U.S. to
remove itself from the Paris climate agreement, one of his strongest remarks yet
expressing his opposition to the landmark deal to keep global warming below
2°C.
"Paris is something we
need to look at closely. It's something we need to exit in my opinion,"
Pruitt said in an interview on "Fox & Friends."
"It's a bad deal for
America," he said. "It's an 'America second, third or fourth' kind of
approach."
The Trump administration has
already taken steps to undo landmark climate regulations, such as the executive
order President Donald Trump signed last month that called for repealing
former President Barack Obama's Clean Power Plan, which requires states to
slash emissions and was a central component of the U.S.'s plan to meet its
Paris goals.
Pruitt said adhering to the
global climate treaty would cost American jobs, a claim which
environmentalists—and, increasingly, even
fossil fuel companies—say is wrong.
Nathaniel Keohane, the
Environmental Defense Fund's vice president on global climate, told
InsideClimate News that "[p]ulling out of the Paris climate accord would
damage the U.S. more than it damages the Paris agreement or climate action
globally."
"American leadership on
climate is the key to attracting jobs and investment in the industries and
sectors that will define the 21st century," Keohane said.
Tiernen Sittenfeld, senior
vice president for government affairs for the League of Conservation Voters,
added, "Even for Scott Pruitt, this is outrageous and beyond the
pale."
"The U.S. helped to lead
the world on this treaty and it's clear that other countries are moving ahead
because they see the incredible opportunities it offers," Sittenfeld said.
Kim Glas, executive director
of the BlueGreen Alliance, a coalition of labor and environmental groups, also
said Thursday, "Administrator Pruitt's statements are unsurprising. He
just can't seem to grasp what the vast majority of Americans and scientists
have already figured out: climate change is real, it is happening now and human
activities are causing it."
The Paris agreement "is a
good deal for America," Glas said. "It will help ensure that America
leads the way globally in creating quality jobs designing, manufacturing, and
installing the clean energy technologies needed to reduce the carbon pollution
that is driving climate change."
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