Michael Bloomberg Joins Gov. Brown to Attack Trump on Climate Change

Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg addresses the United States Conference of May
Joe Raedle/Getty

Former NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg teamed up with Gov. Brown at Thursday’s Global Summit to attack President Trump for withdrawing from the UN’s Paris Climate Change Agreement.

The Co-Chairmen of the Global Climate Action Summit called a press conference at San Francisco’s Moscone Convention Center to promote their ‘America’s Pledge Initiative’ that calls for actions by states, cities and businesses and other non-national actors in the United States to drive down their greenhouse gas emissions consistent with the goals of the Paris Agreement.

Gov. Brown said: “It borders not only on insanity but criminality. The only way we’re going to get global warming under control is the reduce the big pollutants,” according to PBS News.

Brown was especially harsh regarding President Trump’s attempt in early August to try to roll back California’s corporate average fuel economy standards (CAFE) for vehicle fuel mileage and the prior administration’s methane gas emissions rules: “It borders not only on insanity but criminality. The only way we’re going to get global warming under control is to reduce the big pollutants.”

America’s Pledge claims the key to achieve the 2015 Paris Agreement’s goal to cut U.S. carbon emissions by 2025 to 28 percent less than 2005 levels, given the withdrawal  by the American President, is “sectoral transformation” in electricity, buildings, transportation, HFCs, methane, natural lands, and economy-wide carbon pricing.

Bloomberg also blamed the President, but said, “We have market forces at our back and we have the public at our side, so I Iike our chances.”

Key to America’s Agreement success are 10 high-impact decarbonization opportunities:

  1. Double down on renewable energy targets;
  2. Accelerate the retirement of coal power;
  3. Retrofit buildings at key trigger points
  4. Electrify building energy use;
  5. Accelerate electric vehicle adoption;
  6. Phase out super-polluting Hydrofluorocarbons;
  7. Stop methane leaks at the oil and gas wellheads;
  8. Reduce methane leaks in the cities;
  9. Regional strategies for carbon sequestration in natural and working lands; and
  10. State coalition for carbon pricing

To make sure that these opportunities that involve costs and subsidies that may be unpopular with a majority of voters get pursued, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra trumpeted that a coalition of five state attorneys general are supporting a ‘Lawyers for a Sustainable Economy Initiative’ that will feature nine U.S. law firms pledging to provide pro bono legal support to entrepreneurs and community-based non-profits to help advance their work in key climate and sustainability issues.

But while Brown and Bloomberg were speaking, protesters were chanting that Gov. Brown was not serious about fighting climate. The Sacramento Bee reported on Thursday morning that Brown’s administration over the last 8 years in office has approved more than 200 new offshore wells in state waters and more than 23,000 oil and gas drilling permits.

 

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