Republican presidential candidate Donald Trumpโs energy policy to dig, drill, and frack as much fossil fuel out of the ground as possible only really works by denying twoย realities.
The first reality denied is that there is no global agreement to move the world away from the fuels that Trump thinks are theย future.
The second reality denied,ย of course, is the existence of decades of scientific evidence linking fossil fuel burning to dangerous climateย change.
So with this in mind, the Competitive Enterprise Instituteโsย (CEI) Myron Ebellย seemsย a perfect addition to Trumpโsย team.
As the U.S. media picks through the entrails from the first presidential debate, a few hours earlier it was revealed that should Trump win, Ebell would lead the Republicanโs โEPA transition teamโ that would strip the agency of keyย powers.
Ebell has long fought the legitimacy of climate science while promoting fossil fuels โ epitomizing Trumpโs current approach to energy and climateย science.
For the best part of 20 years, Ebell has been actively working in favor of the fossil fuel industry by attempting to undermine climateย science.
In 1998, Ebell joined with the American Petroleum Institute and staff from fossil fuel companies Exxon, Chevron, and Southern Company to try to reshape how the U.S. people understood the risks of climateย change.
In a multi-million dollar plan that was leaked, Ebell and others concluded that a โvictoryโ would be theirs only when the public doubted the links between dangerous global warming and fossil fuelย burning.
Over the years, the CEI, where Ebell works as the director of the Center for Energy and Environment, has accepted cash from fossil fuel interests including oil giant ExxonMobil and foundations funded and controlled by the billionaire brothers Charles and Davidย Koch.
Badย Company
Ebell looks to be in good company in the Republican nomineeโsย camp.ย
In August, Trumpโs team announced Kathleen Hartnett-White as one of several new additions to its โeconomic advisoryย team.โ
Hartnett-White is another who doubts the well-established link between fossil fuel burning and climateย change.
In a column last year, Hartnett-White lauded the โenvironmental benefitsโ of fossil fuel burning, while claiming the evidence for climate change wasย waning.
Hartnett-White is director of an energy and environment project at the Texas Public Policy Foundation (TPPF) โ another group that has taken money from the Kochย brothers.
In July, the TPPF released a โresearch bookletโ written by contrarian Dr. Roy Spencer that attempted to undermine findings related to sea level rise, extreme temperatures, and other impacts from burning fossilย fuels.
Hartnett-White is also an adviser to the CO2 Coalition โ a group that includes extreme climate science denier Patrick Moore, who rejects any evidence for human-caused climateย change.
Trumpโs key energy adviser, Republican congressman Kevin Cramer, is also a self-confessed โskeptic.โย
Another Trump aide and potential energy secretary in a Trump presidency isย Harold Hamm, the founder and CEO of major oil producer Continental Resources. Hammย has also beenย a donor to Cramer’s political campaigns. As DeSmog has reported, Hamm’s company could gain from any future decisions to allow the Keystone XLย pipeline.
Trump’s Climateย Hoax
During the presidential debate, climate change was barely mentioned. At one point, Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton taunted Trump, saying that he โthinks climate change is a hoax perpetrated by theย Chinese.โ
Trump interjected, saying โI do not say that,โ going on to disparage solar power. He has claimed aย tweet saying global warming was a concept โcreated by and for the Chineseโ was a joke, but has continued to refer to climate change using terms like โhoaxโย since.
Given the โadvisersโ Trump is surrounding himself with so far, it seems unlikely he willย get in touch with reality ahead of the Novemberย election.
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