Oops.
Trump’s climate official: ‘I actually don’t know what 2C
means’
Published on 13/11/2017, 8:14pm
The US came to sell fossil fuels as a solution to climate change, but
were interrupted by protests as the divided US arrived in Bonn
US president Donald Trump on a video teleconference monitoring damage
assessments from Hurricane Harvey (Photo: White House)
A Trump administration attempt to offer fossil fuels as a
solution to climate change was subject to protest and walkouts on Monday at UN
climate talks in Bonn.
Representatives of the fossil fuel industry said they wanted to be part
of the conversation and sat through intense questioning and heckling from media
and protesters in the room.
The bitterness that has divided the US since the election of Donald
Trump arrived in Bonn, when around a hundred mostly American climate protestors
disrupted the event, with song, heckling and protest banners.
“So you claim to be an American, but we see right through your greed,”
the protesters sang at a panel including George David Banks, president
Trump’s special energy assistant and moderated by vice president Mike Pence’s
assistant Francis Brooke. Natural gas, coal and nuclear companies were also
represented.
As they marched out of the room, they were joined by hundreds of other
demonstrators that had not been able to get in.
The panel sat quietly through the protest before launching into a
defence of the role of various forms of fossil energy in climate mitigation, in
front of a half-empty room.
Fossil fuels, including high efficiency coal power generation and
carbon capture and storage, “were vital” to achieving the goals of the
Paris deal, said Holly Krutka, vice president of coal generation and emissions
technologies from Peabody Energy.
Banks said: “This panel is only controversial if we choose to bury our
heads in the sand and ignore the realities of a global energy system.” He
repeatedly said he was in Bonn to talk openly.
When asked later by Climate Home News if the administration held the
policy that the 2C warming target from the Paris deal needed to be avoided, he
said: “I actually don’t know what that means, the 2C target”.
Banks has been involved with climate policy, of which the 2C target is
a fundamental tenet, since the Bush administration.
Trump announced that the US
would quit the Paris pact in a Rose Garden Speech last
June, although no exit will be possible before November 2020.
When pushed on their position on Trump’s Paris withdrawal, two of the
six panelists – the gas and nuclear representatives – said they disagreed,
Krutka demurred, Barry Worthington, executive director of the US Energy
Association said he agreed. The administration officials both refused to answer,
although Banks is widely understood to have pushed for Trump to stay inside
the Paris deal.
On the Paris deal, Banks said: “We’re part of the UNFCCC and
climate mitigation is an important goal of the US but… I don’t think its
any surprise that economic prosperity is a higher priority. When the president
looks at the Paris Agreement and climate policy in general, he
looks through the lens of what effect does this have on US
manufacturing and competitiveness.”
Amos Hochstein, senior vice president of marketing at LNG company
Tellurian said he had served in the Obama administration: “I’m very proud of
that. I disagree with a lot of people on this panel but I’m here anyway and if
we really care about clean air and climate change we have to stop siloing
ourselves into communities where we only talk to ourselves.”
The reaction from within the conference in Bonn has been muted, with
many trying to ignore the event.
“This is a sideshow, the world world is not paying any attention,” said
Jay Inslee, governor of Washington, who made a statement to the press before the
event began.
When asked whether coal could be part of the solution to climate
change, Frank Bainimarama, the Fijian prime minister and COP23 president, told
reporters: “I really don’t want to get into an argument with the United States
of America, but we all know what coal does and we all know the effects of coal
mining and of coal…
“There is really no need to talk about coal because we all know what
coal does with regard to climate change,” he added.
Patrick Gomes, the head of the African, Caribbean and Pacific group of
79 nations said that the US meeting was “a diversion, unfortunately” from the
urgent task of climate mitigation and adaptation.
“It has more of a commercial side to it than an ecological or
environmental concern,” he told Climate Home News. “It is regrettable [that the
US] still wants to bring to the fore commercial incentives and issues that take
precedence over humanity.”
US negotiators have kept a low profile at the Bonn summit, raising
their heads above the parapet only to support likeminded countries in trying to
limit the practical scope and range of the Paris agreement.
“They haven’t caused any trouble,” one climate negotiator said. “The
role that they played under the Obama administration is definitely missed and in
that sense its troubling not to have them alongside us on many
issues.”
Another former government official said that Trigg Talley, the leader
of the US delegation would be feeling “terrible, of course” about what he was
being asked to do.
“Representing the Trump administration on climate must be the worst
thing in the world,” the ex-official said.
The EU, which was holding talks with China and Canada while the event
went on, refused to comment on the meeting.
Climate Home News’ reporting at Cop23 is supported in part by the
European Climate Foundation.
Alden Meyer
Director of Strategy and Policy
Union of Concerned Scientists
1825 K Street, NW, Suite 800
Washington, DC 20006
Skype: alden.meyer
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