China, India doing ‘absolutely nothing’ to clean up

Garbage they drop in sea floats into Los Angeles: Donald Trump. US President Donald Trump at the Economic Club of New York on Tuesday, has said countries like China, India and Russia are doing “absolutely nothing” to clean up their smokestacks and industrial plants and the garbage that they drop in sea floats into Los […]

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A waste picker, who are known as 'catadores de lixo' (garbage collector in Portuguese), searches for recyclable materials at Brasilia's garbage dump Lixao da Estrutural, considered as the largest in Latin America, on January 19, 2018. / AFP PHOTO / Sergio LIMA

November 14, 2019

Garbage they drop in sea floats into Los Angeles: Donald Trump.

US President Donald Trump at the Economic Club of New York on Tuesday, has said countries like China, India and Russia are doing “absolutely nothing” to clean up their smokestacks and industrial plants and the garbage that they drop in sea floats into Los Angeles.

Trump also claimed that he considers himself to be, “in many ways, an environmentalist, believe it or not”.

US president said that climate change is a “very complex issue.”

“So…I’m very much into climate. But I want the cleanest air on the planet and I want to have – I have to have clean air – water,” Mr Trump said in remarks at the Economic Club of New York.

Trump while addressing the audience said that the US withdrew from the “one-sided, horrible, horrible, economically unfair, ”close your businesses down within three years,” ”don’t frack, don’t drill, we don’t want any energy” – the horrible Paris Climate Accord that killed American jobs and shielded foreign polluters.”

He said the Paris Climate Agreement was a “disaster” for the US, adding that the deal would have resulted in “trillions and trillions of dollars” of destruction to America.

“And it is so unfair. It doesn’t kick in for China until 2030. Russia goes back into the 1990s, where the base year was the dirtiest year ever in the world,” he said.

While referring to India he said, “India, we are supposed to pay them money because they are a developing nation. I said, We are a developing nation, too” amidst laughter from the audience.

Responding to a question about how he thinks about risk as it relates to trade policy and issues like climate change, Trump said, “when people ask the question…about climate – I always say: You know, I have a little problem.

“We have a relatively small piece of land – the United States. And you compare that to some of the other countries like China, like India, like Russia, like many other countries that absolutely are doing absolutely nothing to clean up their smokestacks and clean up all of their plants and all of the garbage that they’re dropping in sea and that floats into Los Angeles, along with other problems that Los Angeles has, by the way.”

“But when you see this happening, it’s – nobody wants to talk about it. They want to talk about our country. We have to do this. We have can’t have planes any longer. We can’t have cows any longer. We can’t have anything. I said, “What about China?”,” he said.

He said he wants clean air and crystal-clean, clear water and the US today has the “cleanest air we’ve ever had in our country, meaning, over the last 40 years. I guess, 200 years ago was cleaner, but there was nothing around.”
“But I want clean air. I want clean water, environmentally,” he said.

Last week, the US formally notified the United Nations of its withdrawal from the 2015 Paris Climate accord, a landmark global agreement which brought together 188 nations, including India, to fight global warming.

The then US president Barack Obama and Prime Minister Narendra Modi played instrumental roles in the Paris Agreement, which was adopted at the UN climate conference “COP 21” held in the French capital in 2015 with an aim to reduce the hazardous greenhouse gas emissions.

The US president earlier announced the decision to withdraw from the Paris agreement on June 1, 2017. While the process began on November 4 with formally notifying the decision and with due process the US will opt out of the agreement formally on November 4, 2020.

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