CLIMATE SCIENCE
Trump hopefully will change his mind about climate: Bloomberg
by Staff Writers
United Nations, United States (AFP) March 5, 2018

Billionaire Michael Bloomberg said Monday he hopes President Donald Trump will change his mind about climate change, as he took on the role of UN special envoy for climate action.

The former New York mayor will be tasked with supporting UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres' plan to host a major summit next year to take stock of progress in implementing the Paris climate agreement.

Trump last year stunned the world by announcing plans to pull the United States out of the Paris accord, signed by nearly 200 countries and parties. The US president is not expected to attend the 2019 summit.

"My hope is that President Trump listens to his advisers and looks at the data and changes his mind," Bloomberg told reporters as he met with Guterres to discuss his mission.

"If that's the case, that shows a great leader, who, when facts change and they recognize something different they are not bound to what they did before. They are willing to change.

"This president does change his views," added Bloomberg. "Generally, it's from one day to the next, but over a longer period of time, hopefully he will."

Bloomberg said he spoke to Trump once and that "he certainly knows my views on climate change", adding that his staff remained in touch with the US administration.

The UN envoy will be traveling to Cape Town this week as the South African city faces a crisis over its dwindling water supply due to drought and sparse rain.

Guterres praised Bloomberg as a "true leader" on climate which he described as "the defining question of our time".

Under the terms of the Paris agreement, the United States can formally give notice that it plans to withdraw in 2019, three years after the accord came into force.

The withdrawal would become effective a year later, in 2020.


Related Links
Climate Science News - Modeling, Mitigation Adaptation

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Health savings outweigh costs of limiting global warming: study
Paris (AFP) March 2, 2018
The estimated cost of measures to limit Earth-warming greenhouse gas emissions can be more than offset by reductions in deaths and disease from air pollution, researchers said on Saturday. It would cost $22.1 trillion (17.9 trillion euros) to $41.6 trillion between 2020 and 2050 for the world to hold average global warming under two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), a team projected in The Lancet Planetary Health journal. For the lower, aspirational limit of 1.5 C, the cost would be betw ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

CLIMATE SCIENCE
At the UN, a diplomatic dance decides the fate of nations

Venezuela's woes spread to zoos as animals feed on each other

Mobile phones help transform disaster relief

Baby born on British roadside after snow blocks hospital dash

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Researchers demonstrate promising method for improving quantum information processing

Silk fibers could be high-tech 'natural metamaterials'

Squid skin could be the solution to camouflage material

Atomic structure of ultrasound material not what anyone expected

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Chile's Bachelet unveils massive marine parks in legacy move

New Zealand FM's 'strategic anxiety' about Pacific

Better ocean turbulence models to improve climate predictions

Italy, China propose solution to Lake Chad's water problem

CLIMATE SCIENCE
1.5 million penguins discovered on remote Antarctic islands

King penguins may be on the move very soon

Antarctic sea ice shrinks for second-straight year

Spring is springing earlier in polar regions than across the rest of earth

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Cuban cigars: a treasure from Havana to Beijing

The secret to tripling the number of grains in sorghum and perhaps other staple crops

'Noah's Ark' seed vault chalks up a million crop varieties

EU food agency says three pesticides harm bees as ban calls grow

CLIMATE SCIENCE
State of emergency declared in PNG after major quake

New study reveals the secret of magmas that produce global treasures

Study: Hawaiian hotspot migrated between 50 and 60 million years ago

More than 30 believed dead in PNG quake: report

CLIMATE SCIENCE
At least 28 killed in attack on Burkina army HQ: French, African security sources

Malian families accuse army of killing 7 civilians

Anger as rail construction begins in Nairobi National Park

Humans changed the ecosystems of Central Africa more than 2,600 years ago

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Scientists find world's oldest figural tattoos on Egyptian mummies

Seeing the brain's electrical activity

Buried at the stake: Underwater burial site yields skulls on poles

Chimps and bonobos don't need a translator