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The Possible Reasons Big Corporations Are So Eager for Trump to Break His Promise on Paris
The Daily Signal ^ | May 26, 2017 | Fred Lucas

Posted on 05/29/2017 12:19:10 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks

European countries and major corporations are pressuring President Donald Trump to remain in the Paris climate agreement despite his promises on the campaign trail to withdraw the United States from the Obama-era deal that never gained congressional approval.

The Trump administration so far is sticking with being undecided—at least until Trump returns to the United States from his first foreign trip, where on Friday, he’s meeting with Group of Seven ally countries, which support the agreement.

Back home, the pressure is growing from multinational corporations, even the energy sector, which have opposed stricter limitations on carbon.

Exxon Mobil Corp., once run by Trump’s secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, Royal Dutch Shell, and BP are urging the administration to remain in the agreement. Meanwhile, coal mining company Cloud Peak Energy urged the administration to remain.

“BP and Shell are European companies and it’s impossible to do business in Europe without towing the political line,” Myron Ebell, director of the Center for Energy and Environment at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, told The Daily Signal. He added that for oil and gas companies, “the only way to get the price of gas back up is to kill coal. The Paris Agreement kills fossil fuels, but it kills coal first.”

Ebell was part of Trump’s transition team overseeing the Environmental Protection Agency.

The Competitive Enterprise Institute sponsored an ad showing Trump during the campaign saying, “We are going to cancel the Paris climate agreement and stop all payments of the United States tax dollars to U.N. global warming programs.”

While corporate support might seem surprising, it’s very much the same old story for large companies seeking an advantage over smaller competitors, said Katie Tubb, a policy analyst with The Heritage Foundation.

“Big business and big government often go hand-in-hand. Big businesses generally can absorb and adapt to the costs of complying with burdensome regulation, of which Paris is a wellspring,” Tubb told The Daily Signal. “Smaller companies have a much harder time complying, which means less competition for big business. This is especially true if big business can influence the substance of regulations to favor themselves or freeze out competitors. I think in other cases; these large companies are just looking for PR points.”

President Barack Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry led the United States into the Paris climate change agreement, along with 170 other countries. The agreement commits member countries to shift their energy industries away from fossil fuels and toward green energy.

Two dozen major U.S. companies—including Apple, Microsoft, Google, Facebook, the Hartford, Levi Strauss, PG&E, and Morgan Stanley—sent an open letter to Trump published in The New York Times and other newspapers across the country, urging him to remain in the deal. The letter says:

By requiring action by developed and developing countries alike, the agreement ensures a more balanced global effort, reducing the risk of competitive imbalances for U.S. companies … By expanding markets for innovative clean technologies, the agreement generates jobs and economic growth. U.S. companies are well positioned to lead in these markets.

U.S. business is best served by a stable and practical framework facilitating an effective and balanced global response. The Paris Agreement provides such a framework. As other countries invest in advanced technologies and move forward with the Paris Agreement, we believe the United States can best exercise global leadership and advance U.S. interests by remaining a full partner in this vital global effort.

Generally, larger energy companies have an advantage under the climate deal, said Fred Palmer, senior fellow for energy and climate at the Heartland Institute.

“Follow the money,” Palmer told The Daily Signal. “There are companies that want to game the system of using [carbon dioxide] as a currency to make money.”

After meetings at the Vatican earlier this week, Tillerson said, “The president indicated we’re still thinking about that, that he hasn’t made a final decision.”

Ahead of the G7 meeting, Trump chief economic adviser Gary Cohn, the director of the White House National Economic Council, told a pool reporter Friday that the president is weighing both sides.

“I think he’s leaning to understand the European position. Look, as you know from the U.S., there’s very strong views on both sides,” Cohn said. “He also knows that Paris has important meaning to many of the European leaders. And he wants to clearly hear what the European leaders have to say.”

Ebell warned that if the administration seeks to make a deal to stay in the agreement, perhaps with a lower commitment than the Obama administration pledged, then a future president could simply increase the U.S. commitment. That’s why, Ebell said, it’s best for the United States to get out.

“Obviously foreign leaders don’t care what Trump promised voters in the campaign,” Ebell said.

To be sure, many U.S. business groups oppose the Paris Agreement, such as the Industrial Energy Consumers of America—which represents manufacturers and other larger energy-using businesses—that wrote an April 24 letter to administration officials. The letter said:

We are the ones who eventually bear the costs of government imposed [greenhouse gas] reduction schemes. At the same time, we are often already economically disadvantaged, as compared to global competitors who are subsidized or protected by their governments.

Given the above concerns, IECA fails to see the benefit of the Paris Climate Accord. And, the long-term implications of the Paris Climate Accord, which includes greater future [greenhouse gas] reduction requirements, raises serious competitiveness and job implications for [energy-intensive, trade-exposed] industries.

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TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: agw; bigbusiness; biggovernment; climatechange; climatechangefraud; cloudpeak; coal; energy; europe; fakescience; fraud; g7; globalwarming; hoaxes; paris; parisaccords; parisagreement; parisclimate; riotinto; trumpclimatechange; usa
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To: Steelfish
I suspect, he’ll call it a treaty and submit it for 2/3 senate ratification. This will kill the deal.

Unfortunately, that is not a given. I do not trust the Senate RINOS to do the right thing on this.

21 posted on 05/29/2017 3:39:23 PM PDT by NutsOnYew
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To: arthurus

“Europe can shut them out but then Euope raises its own costs oth financially and diplomatically as I am sure that sort of government action would bring retaliation from this end. “

And the energy giants can retaliate and refuse to provide energy. A cold Europe would be an unhappy Europe.


22 posted on 05/29/2017 4:02:58 PM PDT by vette6387
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To: vette6387

Someone would figure out a way around any sanctions, just like Marc Rich did after Guiliani got an indictment against him for selling Iranian oil. Rich wound up with enough cash to be an angel donor to the Clinton Personal Enrichment Fund in exchange for a pardon..


23 posted on 05/29/2017 4:23:38 PM PDT by Hamiltonian
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To: Hamiltonian

withdraw and President Trump is assured of winning in 2020.


24 posted on 05/29/2017 5:00:28 PM PDT by MAGAthon
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To: vette6387

Europe would find itself reliant on Russia for energy and the price would, of course rise significantly as it does when you limit the market.


25 posted on 05/29/2017 5:16:54 PM PDT by arthurus
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

“....we believe the United States can best exercise global leadership and advance U.S. interests by remaining a full partner in this vital global effort.”

_______________________________________________________

Sorry...but these are very narrow corporate interests. And how many of our fellow citizens in the military have to bleed and die to further the interest of these globalists?


26 posted on 05/29/2017 5:25:19 PM PDT by Bishop_Malachi (Liberal Socialism - A philosophy which advocates spreading a low standard of living equally.)
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To: libertylover
They think they are replacing their population with one that will be much more obedient. I expect they all think they are going to "convert" at the appropriate moment and segue right into being sultans and emirs. Things, alas, don'[t work that way. Once set in motion a tipping point will be reached, probably well before the Euro projected tipping/conversion point where the new population will simple take over and kill all the ruler types they can catch. If the Euroelite were to make the transition successfully they would after a time find out that thee is simply not room for more than a tiny fraction of them at the top of a Moslem society and the Byzantine murders and usurpations would become constant. A Moslem society that takes over a technologically superior and more prosperous society converts that society very quickly to Arabia and agriculture contracts to a small percentage of what it was. The population level will begin quickly to follow if there is not the USA to bail them out. A Moslem society cannot support the number of people that just about any other society can support. History shows that everywhere that Islam has conquered. As Europe falls we need to cut off access with the newly Islamized lands and work hard to shore up the Central Europe countries that resisted the invasion. Russia is a bulwark for a time but its own Moslem population is gaining while the Great Russians are barely holding their own right now and probably declining pretty rapidly in the long term.

Short term we could launch a major invasion of Europe and clean out the paynim ourselves but that is not terribly likely.

27 posted on 05/29/2017 5:59:41 PM PDT by arthurus
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