Trump loves fossil fuels; California wants clean energy. Cue collision

Trump loves fossil fuels; California wants clean energy. Cue collision
FILE – Former President Donald Trump attends the closing arguments in the Trump Organization civil fraud trial at New York State Supreme Court in the Manhattan borough of New York, Jan. 11, 2024. Trumps lawyers have asked a New York appellate court to halt collection of the former presidents $454 million civil fraud judgment while he appeals. Trumps lawyers said in a court filing Wednesday that he is planning to post a $100 million appeal bond rather than a bond covering the full amount, which would automatically pause enforcement. (Shannon Stapleton/Pool Photo via AP, File)
(Shannon Stapleton / AP/Pool)

Trump loves fossil fuels; California wants clean energy. Cue collision

Global Warming

Doyle McManus March 31, 2024

Donald Trump says he isnt worried about climate change.

Before he was a presidential candidate, he said global warming was a hoax invented by China to kneecap the American economy.

The climate has always been changing, he shrugged more recently.

If he’s elected president, Trump says, one of his “Day One” priorities will be increasing oil and gas production or, as he puts it: Drill, baby, drill!

With more fossil fuels, he promises, we will be rich again and happy again.

Those positions are at the heart of Trumps campaign to regain the White House. And they put him on a collision course with California, where the Democratic-led government, supported by most voters, has made a clean-energy economy a major goal.

It’s breathtaking how easily manipulated this man is, Gov. Gavin Newsom said in a statement. His only interest is pleasing Big Oil CEOs, and mortgaging our kids and the planet in the process.

A large majority of Californians support their state’s ambitious climate goals, the Public Policy Institute of California found in a survey last year. Almost two-thirds said they believe protecting the environment should be a priority even at the risk of curbing economic growth.

In attacking the state’s environmental agenda, Trump frequently portrays California as a disaster zone, often in wildly exaggerated or invented tales.

If you look at California, its got brownouts and blackouts every single day, he claimed in a campaign video last year. People cant turn on their air conditioners. (Not true; California hasnt had significant power grid problems since 2020.)

If he wins a second term, Trump plans to scrap President Bidens programs encouraging renewable energy. He has said he would offer tax breaks to oil, gas and coal producers; repeal federal subsidies for solar, wind and other renewable energy projects; and roll back Bidens efforts to encourage the use of electric vehicles.

First day in office, Ill be ending all of that,” Trump said last year, referring to EV tax credits and other subsidies. (In fact, he couldn’t repeal the tax credit on Day One that would take an act of Congress but he could add

new

requirements to

further

limit the cars and trucks that qualify for the subsidy.)

Former aides say Trump is also likely to revive two of his first-term goals that spurred clashes with California: revoke the states tough vehicle emissions standards and open more federal waters to oil drilling, including off the Pacific coast.

He failed at both partly because of opposition from California and other states but also because of his administration’s incompetence.

In the first term, the Trump administration had a kind of blunderbuss approach. Their proposals werent well thought out. They often didnt hold up under close review, said Richard M. Frank, a professor of environmental law at UC Davis

Law

School

of Law

. Now they appear to be trying to learn from those mistakes. … They could be a lot more strategic the second time.

The clearest example is Trumps attack on Californias tough automotive emissions standards.

The 1970 Clean Air Act allows the federal Environmental Protection Agency to limit air pollution from automobiles. It also allows California to impose tougher standards because of its decades-long battle to reduce smog, under a “waiver” the EPA normally grants each year.

Congress also allowed other states to adopt the California standards; 17 states and the District of Columbia have done so.

In 2019, after automobile manufacturers complained that the California standards were a burden, Trump announced that he was revoking

the state’sCalifornias

waiver “in order to produce far less expensive cars for the consumer.

His decision was part of

a

broad effort to scale back federal rules requiring auto fleets to reduce

their

fuel consumption.

Newsom and then-Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra sued the federal government, charging that

the

EPA had overstepped its authority. The case meandered through the courts until

President

Biden took office and restored Californias waiver.

Trump hasnt talked explicitly about attacking Californias waiver again. But last year, the conservative Heritage Foundation assembled a team of former Trump aides to compile a policy agenda called Project 2025. The approximately 900-page document includes a detailed strategy for revoking or limiting Californias emissions standards.

It suggests that instead of revoking the waiver,

the

EPA could limit Californias standards to smog-producing pollutants like ozone, not greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide. If that fails, the agenda says,

the

EPA could try to block other states from adopting greenhouse gas standards.

Theyre recognizing that they screwed up the first time and laying out a road map to try to do better the second time, said Dan Becker, an environmental lawyer at the nonprofit Center for Biological Diversity. Theyre basically choosing each of the areas in which California can act and going after each of them.

Becker said the strategy may be aimed at getting the case into the Supreme Court, where a second Trump administration could try its luck before a 6-3 conservative majority.

If a second Trump administration tried to revoke the waiver, Newsom said at a February news conference, the state would go to court again.

We know the playbook, he said. We were successful over and over [in Trumps first term] in the courts, and we have confidence that will continue.

Offshore oil drilling could produce another standoff.

In 2018, Trump proposed opening federal waters along the entire Pacific Coast, as well as Alaska and the Atlantic Coast, to drilling for oil and gas. That kicked up a storm of opposition, including to Trumps surprise from Republicans.

And Trump’s administration found itself tied up in the federal rule-making process.

They made procedural errors that slowed everything down, said Kassie Siegel, an attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity.

If he wins a second term, Trump would

still

have broad authority to open the continental shelf to oil leases, but he would run into other problems.

One is economics: Deep-water drilling in the North Pacific is expensive and risky. Oil companies are more interested in drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and Alaska, where known reserves are larger.

The other is local politics. In 2018, when Trump proposed opening the Pacific Coast to drilling, the California Legislature quickly passed a law banning new oil pipelines, piers or other infrastructure within three miles of shore. That could make it prohibitively expensive to move oil from offshore wells to onshore refineries or terminals.

Oil companies know that any attempt to drill new wells off California would spark massive opposition. A PPIC poll in 2021 found that 72% of Californians, including 43% of Republicans, oppose the idea.

A third potential conflict: wind. Offshore wind farms are a big part of California’s clean energy plans, aimed at supplying about 13% of the state’s power supply by 2045. But wind is Trump’s least favorite energy source.

“Windmills rot. They rust. They kill the birds. It’s the most expensive energy there is,” he charged last year. There’s much more to say about that, and I’ll return to it in a later column.

Newsom says he doesnt believe Trump will get a second term.

It wont happen, he said at the February news conference. Still, just in case, we’re definitely trying to future-proof California in every way, shape or form.

We’re hardly just a punching bag on this,

the governorhe

added. We’re trying to assert ourselves.

But environmentalists are still worried.

The problem is, a second Trump term would come when the climate crisis is more dire than it was in his first term, Becker said. Everything the scientists predicted is happening more quickly than they expected. … But Trump doesn’t believe it’s a problem, doesn’t want to solve it and would only make it worse.”

Which helps explain why so many environmental groups, including the Sierra Club and the League of Conservation Voters, have endorsed Bidens reelection, even though they have criticized many of his decisions: Theyve considered the alternative.

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