As
If it was ever going to make a difference!
Donald
Trump says he believes there is ‘some connectivity’ between
humans and climate change in major U-turn
The
President-elect had suggested climate change was a 'hoax'
22
November, 2016
It
is hard to keep up with the pace of change in the mind of Donald
Trump.
Just
hours after announcing he was not going to pursue an investigation of
Hillary Clinton over her use of a personal email server, he indicated
another important U-turn - this time in regard to climate.
During
the campaign, Mr Trump has suggested climate change was nothing more
than a “hoax”, and that the so-called myth may have been started
by the Chinese.
Mr
Trump has long accused the New York Times of being unfair to him (AP)
However,
in a conversation with journalists from the New York Times on
Tuesday, he indicated he had rethought the matter.
Asked
if thought human activity was linked to climate change; he responded:
“I think there is some connectivity. Some, something. It depends on
how much.”
He
also said he would keep an open mind on whether he would pull the US
out of a landmark international climate change deal.
During
his presidential campaign, Mr Trump repeatedly said he would withdraw
from the 2015 Paris climate accord. But on Tuesday, at a meeting with
reporters that itself experienced a U-turn in regard to whether or
not it would even take place, he said: “I’m looking at it very
closely. I have an open mind to it.”
Mr
Trump, who has been holed up for days in Trump Tower in New York as
he puts together a team for his administration, told the reporters
that he was also thinking about climate change in regard to American
competitiveness and “how much it will cost our companies”.
He
also said he thought clean energy was “very important”.
Travis
Nichols, a spokesman for Greenpeace, told The Independent that
regardless of what Mr Trump had said to the newspaper, the fact he
had appointed a series of climate change deniers and oil industry
lobbyists to his transition team indicated his administration would
still be in “climate denial”.
Mr
Trump’s notoriety as a climate change denier dates back to 2012
when he said in a tweet: “The concept of global warming was created
by and for the Chinese in order to make US manufacturing
non-competitive.”
During
the election campaign, he positioned himself as a defender of
traditional industries, such as coal mining, and mocked Hillary
Clinton’s talk of the need to invest in alternative energy.
UN
climate summit ends with last-gasp plea to Donald Trump: 'Save us'
How
the US can ignore denialist Trump and keep fighting climate change
Ms
Clinton poked fun at Mr Trump’s position when she spoke on the
campaign trail.
Mr
Trump told Fox News in January: “I think that climate change is
just a very, very expensive form of tax. A lot of people are making a
lot of money. I know a lot about climate change….I’ve received
environmental awards.”
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