Disaster
as Trump’s energy policy totally disregards climate change
by
William S. Becker, opinion contributor -
03/31/25 8:00 AM ET
Illustration
/ Courtney Jones; Greg Nash; and Adobe Stock
https://thehill.com/opinion/energy-environment/5220484-trump-energy-policy-global-warming/
Energy —
where we get it, how we use it and what it costs — is fundamental to the
quality and stability of modern life. It influences virtually everything we do
and affects everything we hope to have in the future.
Few areas
of government policy are more important. Preventing nuclear holocaust comes to
mind, but it’s increasingly apparent today that energy policies rank a close
second. So, we must ask why President Trump is imposing short-sighted,
irrational and profoundly destabilizing energy policies on this and future
generations of Americans.
The
president dwells in a fantasy land where there are no downsides to America’s
fossil-fuel addiction. Yet, our history is rife with oil wars, price and supply
shocks, pollution-related diseases, and now the catastrophic weather disasters
related to global climate change.
No place
and no one is safe from the consequences of fossil energy pollution. Yet Trump
continues to deny that global warming is real and primarily caused by burning
coal, oil and natural gas.
He has
ordered the Environmental Protection Agency to stop regulating fossil fuel
pollution and told the industry, which already produces more oil and gas than
any other country, to “drill, drill, drill” for more. At the same time, he is
handcuffing the industry’s competition by freezing public investments in less
expensive clean energy from sunlight, wind, geothermal and other inexhaustible
resources.
Now, with
weather disasters growing more frequent and deadly, Trump and Homeland Security
Secretary Kristi Noem say they plan to kill the government’s principal disaster
response agency, the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Trump’s perverse
policy is to make weather disasters worse while turning the government’s back
on the victims.
While we
can thank fossil fuels for the lifestyles and conveniences most Americans enjoy
today, the legacy of their long dominance is the destabilization and
degradation of environmental systems critical to life. The atmosphere is one of
those systems. Unprecedented weather extremes are the result of dumping
fossil-fuel pollution into it. As the dumping continues, weather disasters
become more frequent and destructive. The American people have been hit by an
average of 23 major weather disasters (those with damages exceeding $1 billion)
annually over the last five years, compared to only nine in the previous 45.
Entire
communities are wiped out today by fires, floods and tornadoes. Nearly 40
percent of the country is experiencing drought-related water crises. Two of
America’s largest water reservoirs, which supply potable water and electricity
to millions of people in seven western states, are reaching “dead pool
status.”
Heat
waves, the biggest weather-related killer in the U.S., are inhibiting outdoor
work ranging from construction to agriculture. Real estate values are falling
in disaster-prone places, but they are still overpriced by hundreds of billions
of dollars. The result is a “climate bubble” that threatens another crash like
the subprime mortgage crisis that triggered a global recession in 2007-2008.
Trump
refuses to recognize these realities. He still calls climate change a hoax. His
Energy secretary says the world’s net-zero-carbon goal is “sinister.” At the
Environmental Protection Agency, Administrator Lee Zeldin has proudly launched
the “biggest deregulatory action in U.S. history” to “drive a dagger into the
heart of the climate change religion” and “unleash American energy.” What the
administration is really unleashing is more pollution, more disasters and more
lost lives and treasure.
Trump
says more oil and gas production will lower energy costs for American families,
but a global market rather than U.S. production will determine these costs. The
U.S. Treasury Department has predicted that fossil-fueled climate change will
cause lost wages, more medical expenses, higher consumer prices, astronomical
insurance premiums, and “significant financial strain” for many American
households.
Although
Trump claims that global warming is a scam, the real scam is his energy policy.
It is designed not for energy security but to satisfy big oil’s greed and
maintain its support of Trump’s power.
How do we
develop a sane national energy policy? The biggest obstacle is partisanship.
Republicans should never have allied with big oil to politicize climate and
energy policies. Fossil energy pollution and global warming are universal
threats, and Americans realize it.
Over 70
percent of Americans acknowledge that global warming is happening, and 63
percent worry about it. Nearly half of Americans say they’ve personally
experienced its effects. Two-thirds want the U.S. economy to shift to 100
percent clean energy in the next 25 years, much more rapidly than past big
energy transitions.
No part
of the United States, red or blue, is exempt from weather disasters. Rebuild by
Design, a disaster-mitigation think tank, notes that climate-related disasters
occurred in all of the nation’s congressional districts except two during
2011-2024. Over 95 percent of Americans live in counties that experienced one
or more major disaster declarations during that time, and 40 of the 50 states
experienced 20 or more major disasters.
What
should Congress do? More to the point, what should the American people
demand?
Congress
should depoliticize climate change and the transition to clean energy. It
should preserve clean energy investments in the Inflation Reduction Act and the
bipartisan infrastructure bill; end taxpayer subsidies for fossil fuels and
production on public lands; strengthen rather than suspend EPA’s regulation of
fossil fuel pollution; prevent Trump from defunding the government’s climate
science and information programs; and direct him to reenter the Paris climate
agreement. The Senate should elevate the agreement to formal treaty status
where commitments have the force of domestic law.
In
addition, Congress should require the administration to present a plan to
improve and streamline FEMA, and it should pass the bipartisan bill introduced
recently to elevate FEMA to an independent agency that reports directly to the
president.
Trump’s
energy policy and the partisan standoff on climate policies in the United
States are a “profound abdication of leadership,” as one progressive group put
it. Global warming is advancing while Trump is forcing the government to
retreat. For the sake of all Americans now and in the future, the abdication
must end.
William
S. Becker is a former regional director at the U.S. Department of Energy and
author of several books on climate change and national disaster policies,
including the “100-Day Action Plan to Save the Planet,” published by St.
Martin’s Griffin, and “The Creeks Will Rise: People Co-Existing with Floods,”
published by the Chicago Review Press.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário