Trump’s coronation leaves climate action in the cold
The Republican nominee’s promise to “make America great again” will provide an echo chamber for climate sceptics

He is unlikely to win. Trump’s habit of alienating large constituencies (such as many women, and ethnic minority voters), and the arithmetic of the population-weighted, state-by-state electoral college system, has ensured Clinton is the clear bookmakers' favourite.
At time of writing, the polls gave Clinton a sizeable lead in many of that states that Trump would need to win in November.
But given that few pundits expected Trump to make it past the winter primary season (he secured the majority of Republican delegates with months to spare), and an anti-establishment backlash across the western world (such as the “Brexit” vote in the UK), the highly decisive property developer’s chances can’t be written off.
At the convention, there isn’t going to be much new or coherent in terms of policy on a range of issues, including on climate, energy and the environment. That’s not the purpose of party conventions, which are pitched as appeals to the nation as a whole on why their candidate should be president.
However, we will hear plenty of bellicose statements from the right-wing of the Republican Party about the need to defeat Hillary Clinton in November and take apart many of the policies enacted by Barack Obama during his eight years in the White House.
A 66-page document released at the convention, titled the "Republican Platform", asserts that coal is a "clean" energy source and promises to defend the mining industry from the Democratic Party’s "radical anti-coal agenda".
This convention will likely provide an echo chamber for the views of Trump and many Republicans that climate change is a hoax; that America could and should continue to burn fracked oil and gas, as well as coal; and that efforts at a greener energy mix are an unconstitutional overreach by the executive branch.
To a world that is relying on the US to deliver on President Obama’s promises to tackle climate change and promote low carbon energy, such pronouncements raise concerns about how the world's second-largest emitter will engage in efforts to curb global warming.
Yet the likelihood that self-styled "The Donald" will lose shouldn’t necessarily put minds at ease.
That’s because a string of lawmakers, many of whom oppose action on climate change, have resolved to roll back President Obama’s environmental agenda through blocking measures in Congress (such as restricting funding to the Environmental Protection Agency and attaching "riders" to bills aimed at hindering the Clean Power Plan), and continue to support the fight being waged through the courts.
These congressional leaders, such as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, will have the floor at the Cleveland convention and will resolve to continue their crusade in support of fossil fuels no matter who wins the White House.
In contrast with many previous conventions, few from the moderate strands of the Republican Party will even turn up. Some on this wing of the party don’t even want their fellow Republican to become president. And although many climate-sceptic governors and lawmakers won't openly admit it, green technologies and renewables create jobs in their home states. In Iowa, bipartisan cooperation has encouraged a thriving wind energy industry.
This week will be very much the Donald J Trump show, and clarity on his climate, energy and environmental policies, should it be forthcoming during this campaign, is likely to come much closer to the time of November’s election.
According to some specialists, we may hear something cursory from some of the speakers on improving energy efficiency (so as to make the US even less reliant on a volatile Middle East for oil) and perhaps some talk of changing subsidies for fossil fuels. But this is thin gruel from a party that has traditionally given big prominence to energy issues in electoral campaigns.
The Republicans to watch in Cleveland…

But Trump’s strident and highly decisive views on the economy, global trade, law-and-order, immigration, and global security, are likely to occupy most of his speech to delegates. Trump is a well-known opponent of wind turbines (particularly when they are within sight of his golf courses) and would work closely with Republicans in Congress to obstruct or challenge President Obama’s energy plans. He has also threatened to “tear up” the Paris Agreement, prompting moves by the Obama administration to implement as much as it can before November.
It is likely that in the event of a Trump presidency that Congress (mainly Democrats and moderate Republicans) would be a restraining hand on some of his wilder intentions. And there is precedent for Republican presidents to surprise while in office (Nixon brought in the 1972 Clean Air Act, and Reagan signed the Montreal Protocol in 1987).




And the Republican progressives on climate who won’t be there…



Pictures of Donald Trump, Mike Pence, Paul Ryan, Marco Rubio, and John McCain were taken by Gage Skidmore. Picture of Mike Bloomberg was taken by Ralph Alswang. Picture of Henry Paulson was taken by Edwin Wriston.
courtesy:chinadialogue
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