A destructive legacy: Trump bids for final hack at environmental protections
Administration finishing off regulatory moves to lock in drilling, loosen wildlife protections and roll back pollution standards
Donald Trump is using the dying embers of his US presidency to hastily push through a procession of environmental protection rollbacks that critics claim will cement his legacy as an unusually destructive force against the natural world.
Trump has yet to acknowledge his election loss to president-elect Joe Biden but his administration has been busily finishing off a cavalcade of regulatory moves to lock in more oil and gas drilling, loosened protections for wildlife and lax air pollution standards before the Democrat enters the White House on 20 January.
Trumps interior department is hastily auctioning off drilling rights to Americas last large untouched wilderness, the sprawling Arctic National Wildlife Refuge found in the tundra of northern Alaska. The refuge, home to polar bears, caribou and 200 species of birds, has been off limits to fossil fuel companies for decades but the Trump administration is keen to give out leases to extract the billions of barrels of oil believed to be in the areas coastal region.
The leases could result in the release of vast quantities of carbon emissions as well as upend the long-held lifestyle of the local Gwichin tribe, which depends upon the migratory caribou for sustenance. Several major banks, fiercely lobbied by the Gwichin and conservationists, have refused to finance drilling in the refuge but industry groups have expressed optimism that the area will be carved open.
Much more:
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/nov/21/trump-environmental-protections-rollback-climate-crisis?CMP=share_btn_tw
An airplane flies over caribou on the coastal plain of the Arctic national wildlife refuge in north-east Alaska. Photograph: US Fish and Wildlife Service/AP