This is a guest post by ClimateDenierRoundup, cross-posted from EcoWatch
Donald Trumpย has said numerous times in various places that he does not considerย climate changeย to be a significant problem warranting corrective action. From calling itย pseudoscienceย to aย Chinese conspiracyย toย anย elaborateย hoax, heโs made it a point to take theKoch-approved stance, even as he disavows such big-money influence in politics. But as Politicoโs Ben Schreckingerย has uncovered,ย when it comes to his business and not campaign rhetoric, Trump apparently takes climate changeย seriously.
At a minimum, those in charge of runningย one of Trumpโsย golf coursesย in Ireland seem to be climate conscious. In a planning application, Trump asked for permission to construct a two-mile sea wall to keep the risingย sea levelsย from erodingย theย golf course. The impact statement refers not only to the coastal erosion from rising seas, but also the even larger risk from storm systems amplifiedย byย globalย warming.
The company made this a public issue as well, distributing a brochure to locals to gain their support for coastal protection,ย which specificallyย mentionsย the sea level rise and storms that will increase coastal erosion. So whileย Trumpโsย political rhetoric is full-on conspiracy theory denial, this business move shows a rational reaction to a known risk. As such, we can probably expect him to disavow this move to go green so he can keep making the greenbacks from his golf greens. Though the plan is to build a wall and we all know how he feels aboutย that.
News thatย theย Donaldโs businesses take climateย changeย seriously comes just after heโs made some unsurprising remarks about climate, specifically about how he wouldย renegotiateย the Paris climate agreement.ย Chris Mooney explainedย why those comments were โso bizarreโ on a few different levels. Short version: Trumpโs statement suggests he doesnโt have the foggiest ideaย what theย Paris agreementย accomplished, how itโs structured or what itย represents.
Ever the optimists,ย though, weโd like to think that Trumpโs insistence that he will hire the best people would mean that he would pick climate advisors from the 97 percent and not theย frequentlyโwrongย andย less-expertย deniers. And his adaptation plan in Ireland suggests that on some level, this is true. So perhaps if elected he would hire the best, heed their adviceย and acknowledge the reality of man-made climate change. And to prevent being a flip-flopper, he can use this Irish golf course as a way to tee up the pivot from far-right primary to moderate general electionย campaigning.
Unfortunately, at the campaign level this optimism seems as outlandish as Trumpโs conspiracies sinceย Donald is seeking energy adviceย from a pro-fossil fuel congressman from North Dakota. And even more unfortunately, when it comes to the high-profile issue of healthcare, evenย conservatives have lambastedย his plan as being so bad that โto suggest it was pulled together by an unpaid campaign intern would be an insult to the capabilities of unpaid interns.โ Someone from the free-market focused Cato institute called it โa series of ignorant, incoherent and self-contradictory verbalย spasms.โ
Which some might think suggests that it wasnโt an unpaid intern that wrote it, but Donaldย himself.
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