{"id":46215,"date":"2016-11-23T16:42:38","date_gmt":"2016-11-23T21:42:38","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/planetsave.com\/?p=46215"},"modified":"2016-11-23T16:42:38","modified_gmt":"2016-11-23T21:42:38","slug":"trump-administration-budget-demolish-climate-funding","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/planetsave.com\/articles\/trump-administration-budget-demolish-climate-funding\/","title":{"rendered":"Trump Administration Budget Could Demolish Climate Funding"},"content":{"rendered":"

Originally published on Climate Central<\/a><\/em>.
\nBy Brian Kahn and Bobby Magill<\/p>\n

The world is waiting to hear what President-elect Donald Trump has in mind for governing the U.S. Among the biggest questions is what will happen to the budget for climate and energy-related activities<\/a>.<\/p>\n

Though they\u2019re a relatively small piece of a federal budget that is in excess of $1 trillion, how the administration deals with climate and energy will go a long ways toward determining the future of the planet.<\/p>\n

\u201cWe don’t get a second chance,\u201d Secretary of State John Kerry said last week at the United Nations climate talks in Morocco. \u201cWe have to get this right and we have to get it right now.\u201d<\/p>\n

The climate and clean energy budget could be in peril, though. Trump has called climate change a hoax created by the Chinese and has vowed to end the Paris Agreement<\/a> (though on Tuesday, he softened<\/a>\u00a0on both stances<\/a>\u00a0in a meeting\u00a0with New York Times reporters).<\/p>\n

In a video statement released on Monday, he said he would \u201ccancel job-killing restrictions on the production of American energy, including shale energy and clean coal, creating many millions of high-paying jobs.\u201d That could be a reference to his stated goal to rescind the Clean Power Plan and Environmental Protection Agency rules.<\/p>\n

The EPA transition team leader is Myron Ebell, a climate denier from the Competitive Enterprise Institute. On Monday, the transition team announced that Thomas Pyle, a former Koch brothers lobbyist, would head up the Energy Department transition and Doug Domenech, who runs Fueling Freedom, a group that aims to \u201cexplain the forgotten moral case for fossil fuels,\u201d would head the Interior Department efforts.<\/p>\n

Add in a Republican-controlled Senate and House, which have repeatedly tried to block climate action under President Obama, and it\u2019s likely that the federal climate budget<\/a> will suffer in the coming years. Just how remains to be seen until Trump proposes his first budget.<\/p>\n

Here\u2019s where a number of federal agencies stand with climate and energy funding, what they spend it on, and what could be under fire after Jan. 20 when Trump takes office. The budget numbers below are based on the 2017 fiscal year budget requests for each agency or department.<\/p>\n

Energy Department
\n2017 climate-related budget: $8.5 billion<\/h3>\n

What it\u2019s spent on:<\/strong> Energy efficiency and renewable and nuclear energy research and development as well as science and computing.<\/p>\n

What could happen to it:<\/strong> Trump has said little about what his Energy Department would look like or how its funding would be affected. However, his energy plan<\/a> calls for aggressively promoting fossil fuels to achieve full energy independence and create new jobs. His plan says he would continue research on nuclear power and renewables, but do so without preferring one energy source over another. By contrast, the Obama administration, through its Climate Action Plan, has made developing renewables a priority while restricting new coal development on federal lands. Coal is a major source of the greenhouse gases driving climate change.<\/p>\n

If the Department of Energy deemphasizes research and development on renewables, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) could take a major hit. The NREL is a national lab that researches renewable power and energy efficiency technology, and ways to make the electric power grid more sustainable. The DOE, which determines funding for the 17 national laboratories scattered about the country, funds 80 percent of NREL\u2019s budget, while the other 20 percent comes from other federal agencies and the lab\u2019s partnerships with industry.<\/p>\n

\u201cWe can\u2019t speculate on what sort of policies President-elect Trump may choose to prioritize or what the related impacts will be for NREL,\u201d lab spokeswoman Heather Lammers said. \u201cIn the meantime, we remain focused on our mission to find answers to today\u2019s energy challenges.\u201d<\/p>\n

Interior Department
\n2017 climate-related budget: $1.1 billion<\/h3>\n

What it\u2019s spent on:<\/strong> Supporting scientific research and managing landscapes for climate resilience as well as expanding public access to climate-related information. The Interior Department, through the U.S. Geological Survey, funds climate science centers, and research on carbon sequestration.<\/p>\n

Interior\u2019s climate resiliency programs include nearly $200 million to help communities such as those damaged by Hurricane Sandy to shore themselves against extreme weather, sea level rise and other impacts of climate change.<\/p>\n

What could happen to it:<\/strong> Trump has been relatively silent on his intentions for the Interior Department other than saying that he wants to open federal public lands \u2014 many of them managed by Interior \u2014 to fossil fuels development to the maximum extent possible while also denying the existence of climate change.<\/p>\n

Trump is considering<\/a> a wide range of fossil fuels-friendly candidates for Interior Secretary, including Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin, former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, Lucas Oil co-founder Forrest Lucas, and Idaho Gov. Butch Otter, among others.<\/p>\n

State Department
\n2017 climate-related budget: $984 million<\/h3>\n

What it\u2019s spent on:<\/strong> Almost anything the U.S. does about climate change on the international stage comes via the State Department. That includes committing money to the Green Climate Fund, a global fund to help developing countries adapt to and mitigate climate change, and the U.N. climate negotiation and research process itself.<\/p>\n

The U.S. also administers climate aid directly through the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). More than 40 percent of USAID\u2019s climate budget goes into funding adaptation projects that range from helping provide weather-based crop insurance to aiding poor farmers in Ethiopia to helping ensure countries can meet their National Determined Contributions to the Paris Agreement.<\/p>\n

What could happen to it:<\/strong> Trump has said he would pull out of the Paris Agreement<\/a>. That would likely also come with climate funding cuts to the United Nations programs<\/a> that are part of the international process.<\/p>\n

What happens to climate-related aid administered through USAID is less clear. Trump hasn\u2019t announced any specific plans on aid, though in a 2012 tweet<\/a>\u00a0he intimated that the World Bank linking poverty and climate change was a bad idea. In his presidential bid announcement he said the U.S. should \u201cstop sending foreign aid to countries that hate us.\u201d More broadly, Trump has espoused an \u201cAmerica First\u201d policy, which could put international development in the crosshairs.<\/p>\n

Without any specific policy preferences, it will be up to State Department officials to make the case for why their funding is so important. Ed Carr<\/a>, a geographer who works on international development at Clark University but has extensive contacts at USAID, said it will likely require framing that speaks to Trump, which might be slightly different than past presidents.<\/p>\n

\u201cHe sees himself as a business person with good deals and bad deals,\u201d Carr said. \u201cAlmost everybody knows dealing with something proactively costs you much less than reacting much later. Being able to demonstrate that with aid could speak to the businessman and help convince him.\u201d<\/p>\n

NASA
\n2017 climate-related budget: $1.9 billion<\/h3>\n

What it\u2019s spent on:<\/strong> NASA funds a variety of climate research on earth and in space. Closer to home, it manages one of the gold standard global temperature records<\/a>. Its researchers also model the climate and monitor the ice sheets at both ends of the poles for possible signs of melt, which could inundate coastal cities<\/a>.<\/p>\n

Beyond the exosphere, NASA satellites monitor carbon dioxide<\/a>, precipitation<\/a>, storms, sea levels, land cover change and even gravity shifts<\/a> at the poles due to melting in ice. These satellites provide a baseline that can measure future climate change against it and also provide crucial information for storm monitoring and weather forecasting.<\/p>\n

What could happen to it: <\/strong>At an October rally in Florida, Trump said he would refocus NASA\u2019s mission on space exploration. Bob Walker, a former Republican congressman who has advised Trump on space policy, told the Telegraph<\/a> in a recent interview that NASA has been reduced to “a logistics agency concentrating on space station resupply and politically correct environmental monitoring.\u201d<\/p>\n

Other Republicans in Congress have also expressed a desire to spend more on space exploration while cutting into the agency\u2019s climate science research. Despite Republican opposition, NASA\u2019s earth science budget has grown during the Obama administration. That could change if Trump\u2019s desire to \u201crefocus\u201d the agency comes in the form of earth science budget cuts.<\/p>\n

Environmental Protection Agency
\n2017 climate-related budget: $1.1 billion<\/h3>\n

What it\u2019s spent on:<\/strong> Climate and air quality research and development as well as enforcing climate rules and regulations such as the Clean Power Plan, which would cut greenhouse gas emissions from coal-fired power plants. Cutting the EPA\u2019s budget to prevent it from regulating emissions that cause climate change could be a setback to the Paris Climate Agreement, which was signed with the understanding that the U.S. would be among the world\u2019s leaders in emissions cuts. Without the EPA\u2019s emissions regulations, the world potentially will be unable to meet the ultimate climate goal \u2014 to prevent global warming from exceeding 2\u00b0C (3.6\u00b0F).<\/p>\n

What could happen to it:<\/strong> With the EPA transition team headed up Ebell, a climate change denier, and Trump\u2019s stated intention to cut climate-related regulations administered by the EPA, the agency is expected to see deep funding cuts, though nobody knows for sure how deep they\u2019ll be.<\/p>\n

David Goldston<\/a>, government affairs director for the Natural Resources Defense Council, said it\u2019s unclear how quickly EPA funding might be cut and how soon rollbacks of regulations might occur, but it\u2019s clear that funding for the agency will be a battleground.<\/p>\n

\u201cI think they\u2019re going to pull back on everything they can,\u201d said former New Jersey Republican Gov. Christine Todd Whitman<\/a>, the first EPA administrator under George W. Bush. \u201cThey do not believe in climate change and they do not like regulation.\u201d<\/p>\n

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
\n2017 climate-related research and development: $190 million<\/h3>\n

What it\u2019s spent on:<\/strong> NOAA\u2019s climate science budget funds both in-house researchers and a number of programs at universities. The agency monitors global issues like greenhouse gases, sea level rise, Arctic sea ice<\/a> and El Ni\u00f1o<\/a>\u00a0as well as another gold standard global temperature dataset.\u00a0But it also provides regional climate services that take that data and make it local through the Drought Monitor or regional climate offices, which help farmers, city planners and local governments. The agency also helps maintain research bases at the South Pole and Greenland.<\/p>\n

What could happen to it:<\/strong> NOAA might be a rare climate bright spot under Trump.<\/p>\n

Walker has hinted that what NASA loses in earth science research could be shifted over to NOAA. It\u2019s unclear, however, if the added responsibilities will come with a bigger budget with Walker only saying that \u201cthere would have to be some budget adjustments.\u201d<\/p>\n

It seems unlikely that those adjustments would just give NASA\u2019s climate chunk to NOAA given that it\u2019s an order of magnitude larger than NOAA\u2019s current climate budget. So while it bodes well that NOAA may not lose its budget for climate research, it would be hard-pressed to fill NASA\u2019s shoes without adequate funding.<\/p>\n

Reprinted with permission.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

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