Climate change deniers to fore as Trump rolls back Obama policies

Top US policy-making posts are filled with sceptics of human-caused global warming

Emissions rise from the stacks of the Linden Generating Station in Linden, New Jersey. President Donald Trump is preparing to unveil an executive order to dismantle President Barack Obama’s climate change policies. Photograph: Justin Lane/EPA

As President Donald Trump prepares to unveil an executive order to dismantle President Barack Obama's climate change policies, Washington's policy-making posts are filling with officials who have a record of openly denying the established science of human-caused climate change.

Climate denial starts at the top:

President Donald Trump

Trump, the ultimate decider, has demonstrated a cavalier approach to the peer-reviewed atmospheric data that makes up the core of climate science. He has called Obama’s climate change regulations “stupid”. But in other forums, he has denied making some of those statements and shifted his position.

What he has said: He said of climate change at a 2015 rally in South Carolina: "A lot of it's a hoax. It's a hoax."

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But in an interview with the New York Times shortly after the election, he seemed to moderate: "I have an open mind to it."

Vice-president Mike Pence

Pence, the president's influential No 2, has appeared to question climate science, although his aim was less to question the existence of climate change as to stand up for the coal-fired power plants that provide his home state, Indiana, with most of its electricity.

What he has said: "It's just a few years ago, we were talking about global warming, which is – we haven't seen a lot of warming lately. I remember back in the '70s when we were talking about the coming ice age. And, look, you know, we have – we've had a tough winter. And in the Midwest, we're – we're made of hardy stock. We've seen these kind of winters before. And we'll shoulder through them. We'll leave the scientific debates for the future." – MSNBC interview, 2014.

In an interview with CNN in September, Pence, like his boss, modulated that view. “There’s no question that the activities that take place in this country and in countries around the world have some impact on the environment and some impact on climate. But Donald Trump and I say let’s follow the science, but for heaven’s sakes let’s not go rushing into the kind of restrictions on our economy that are putting Americans out of work and, frankly, are driving jobs out of this country.”

Stephen Bannon

Trump's influential senior strategist is the former chief executive at Breitbart News, which regularly publishes articles with headlines like "Global Temperatures Plunge. Icy Silence From Climate Alarmists" and "Climate Change: The Greatest-Ever Conspiracy Against the Taxpayer." Bannon is said to be pushing Trump to withdraw the United States from the 2015 Paris agreement, which committed nearly every country to take action on carbon dioxide pollution.

What he has said: The national debt is "not a manufactured crisis like global warming or the health care crisis. This is a – this is an existential crisis." – Fox News, 2010.

Scott Pruitt

The administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency will lead the complex legal efforts to dismantle the Obama-era EPA climate change regulations.

What he has said: "I think that measuring with precision human activity on the climate is something very challenging to do, and there's tremendous disagreement about the degree of impact, so, no, I would not agree that it's a primary contributor to the global warming that we see." – Pruitt on carbon dioxide and the environment on CNBC's Squawk Box, March 9th.

David Kreutzer

Kreutzer, a top EPA aide to Pruitt, spent years at the conservative Heritage Foundation, where he was a vociferous critic of climate science. Kreutzer is pressing a hard-line stance against climate policies, such as legally challenging court-ordered regulation of carbon dioxide pollution.

What he has said: On a panel in January about carbon dioxide emissions, fellow panellists suggested that increased carbon dioxide emissions could be beneficial to the planet. The crowd's laughter prompted Kreutzer to snap, "You're laughing because you're ignorant."

"A common claim among proponents of action on climate change is that the overwhelming majority of climatologists agree on global warming science. One commonly cited statistic is that 97 per cent of climatologists agree on global warming. The 97 per cent statistic is nothing more than a false talking point; no overwhelming consensus exists among climatologists on the magnitude of future warming or on the urgency to reduce greenhouse gas emissions." – The State of Climate Science: No Justification for Extreme Policies, 2016 Heritage Foundation report, with Kreutzer as lead author.

Senator James Inhofe

The author of a 2012 book, The Greatest Hoax: How the Global Warming Conspiracy Threatens Your Future, and a senior member of the senate committees on the environment and armed services, Inhofe is a crucial voice in the debate over climate change. Trump and Pruitt have mined Inhofe's former staff members to serve as energy and environment policy advisers.

What he has said: "The claim that global warming is caused by man-made emissions is simply untrue and not based on sound science." – Inhofe, circa 2003.

"Obama has built a culture of radical alarmists, and they'll be back. You and I and the American people have won a great victory, but the war goes on. Stay vigilant." – Video address this month to the Heartland Institute, a group devoted to discrediting climate change.

Republican Lamar Smith

The chairman of the House science committee has subpoenaed scientists and questioned their work on many topics, but particularly on human-caused climate change.

What he has said: "Climate change is caused by a combination of factors, including natural cycles, solar variability and human activity. Scientists still disagree about how much each of these factors contributes to overall climate change. What climate alarmists say is sometimes untrue and often exaggerated. We should rely on good science, not science fiction, when we evaluate climate change." – Op-ed article in USA Today, 2015.

Rick Perry

Now the secretary of energy, Perry drew attention during his tenure as the governor of Texas and as a presidential candidate in 2012 and 2016 for mocking climate science. But during his senate confirmation hearing to head an agency that oversees much of the government-funded research into climate change, Perry reversed those views.

What he has said: "It's all one contrived phony mess that is falling apart under its own weight. Al Gore is a prophet all right, a false prophet of a secular carbon cult, and now even moderate Democrats aren't buying it." – Fed Up! Our Fight to Save America From Washington, a 2010 book written by Perry.

But at his confirmation hearing in January, Perry reversed that view: “I believe the climate is changing. I believe some of it is naturally occurring, but some of it is also caused by man-made activity. The question is: How do we address it in a thoughtful way that doesn’t compromise economic growth, the affordability of energy or American jobs?”

New York Times