Trump withdraws from climate pact, world leaders push back
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s supporters on Friday cast his decision to abandon the world’s climate change pact as a “refreshing” stance for the U.S. that would save jobs and unburden industry.
In a fierce rejoinder from across the globe, leaders of other nations and scientists pointed to jobs that could be created in green technology and the edge China could be given as a result. China has overtaken the U.S. in transitioning to renewable energy, generating a fifth of its electricity from renewable sources. The U.S. only sources about 13 per cent of its electricity from renewable energy.
In television interviews the morning after Trump’s announcement, Vice-President Mike Pence and Kellyanne Conway, a senior White House aide, defended Trump’s decision as a reassertion of America’s sovereignty. They both appeared on Fox News’ “Fox & Friends.”
Pence called Trump’s decision “refreshing.” The Paris deal “really put an extraordinary burden on the economy while allowing some countries around the world like China and India to literally go a decade or more without any accountability for reducing C02 emissions,” Pence said.


