On Tuesday, a week after the end of the sixth-warmest winter in the continental United States in recorded history, President Donald Trump announced a series of actions meant to unwind or dramatically halt Barack Obama's efforts to fight climate change.
What does this mean? What will the effects be? Can Trump keep his promises on energy job creation?
Here are some questions to those questions in the form of a FAQ.
1. Do scientists believe that humans are causing the climate to warm? Do Americans?
Climate scientists are in near-universal agreement that human activity – mostly the burning of fossil fuels such as coal and oil – are producing gases that remain in the atmosphere. There, they act like a sort of blanket, preventing heat from escaping into space and slowly – as in, over the course of decades – making the Earth warmer.
The main contributor to climate change over time has been burning coal for the production of electricity, which releases carbon dioxide, among other things. Over the past few decades, the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has increased steadily; since the advent of the Industrial Age, it's increased exponentially.
In correlation with that, global temperatures have risen higher and higher. The long-term effects of that increase are likely to include higher sea levels (as ice caps melt and water expands), more severe precipitation events and extended droughts.
Climate change became a fraught political subject about 20 years ago, with the landmark climate agreement known as the Kyoto Protocol. President George W. Bush's decision to step away from the agreement and, a few years later, Al Gore's documentary film "An Inconvenient Truth" helped push climate change squarely into the political arena. Over the past decade, the subject has been one of the most partisan in American politics.
Over the past few years, though, views have shifted. Recent polling from Gallup shows that concern about climate change has surged, with Americans accepting that human activity is causing the shift and that the long-term effects of climate change have already begun.
Just this week, Gallup reported that half the country now identifies as "concerned believers" – people who accept climate science and are worried about addressing it.
President Trump is not among that group.
2. What does Trump plan to do?
There are three main components.
First, Trump hopes to dismantle a rule advanced by the Obama administration that would reduce carbon dioxide emissions from coal-burning power plants. The Obama administration also had a rule affecting newly constructed power plants, limiting allowable carbon dioxide levels, but that didn't affect older plants. What's more, many older plants still in use were made exempt from key provisions of the 1970 Clean Air Act, under the assumption they would eventually be replaced. In many cases, they weren't.
Second, Trump wants to promote fossil fuel extraction, in an effort to make American energy independent and to fulfill a campaign pledge to bolster the coal industry. As part of that effort, Trump will remove a moratorium on coal leasing by the government, allowing federal land to be used for coal mining.
Third, Trump wants to strip consideration of the long-term effects of climate change from routine government decision-making.
3. Can Trump save the coal industry?
Trump can probably tack a few years onto the lifespan of the coal industry, but he almost certainly can't revive it as a viable economic engine for communities where it was once prominent.
Between 1985 and 2000, the number of people working in the coal industry in the United States fell from 178,000 to 71,000. There are a lot of reasons for that decline, including the increased use of automation and that extracting coal from the same mine necessarily becomes harder over time, as easily accessible seams are tapped out. From 2000 to 2012 or so, the industry saw a brief resurgence. But then it collapsed, falling from about 90,000 employees to 50,000 or so. (Few of those employees are actually miners, for what it's worth.)
The blame for that recent collapse has been placed largely on Obama's regulatory actions. Charles Murray, a fervently conservative coal mining executive, told the Guardian this week that he considered Obama's regulatory actions to be "fraudulent" and the Obama administration's effort to protect waterways from mining an attempt to "destroy our nation's underground coalmines and put our nation's coalminers out of work." A 2012 study estimated that a fifth of streams in southern West Virginia had been polluted by coal mining; Trump overrode Obama's protection rule.
But that said, Murray was also realistic about the fate of the industry. When he spoke with the president at the White House last month, he said he told Trump to "temper his expectations" about restoring coal jobs. "He can't bring them back," Murray said.
Why? There's a hint in another comment Murray made to the Guardian, which was that "we do not have a climate change or global warming problem, we have an energy cost problem." There's another big factor in coal's recent decline that ties into our next question.
4. Will Trump help the United States become energy independent?
Over the course of his presidential campaign, Trump repeatedly decried the inability of fossil fuel companies to drill on government property. The impression he gave was of a fossil-fuel industry hampered by government to the point of ineffectiveness.
In fact, the fossil fuel industry thrived under Barack Obama for one simple reason: Improvement in horizontal drilling techniques, which led to the fracking boom and surges in production of oil and natural gas from 2005 on.
The boom in new natural gas production meant that prices fell dramatically. While extracting natural gas releases the potent greenhouse gas methane into the atmosphere, it burns much more cleanly than coal. That and the cheap price led a number of power producers to transition from burning coal to burning gas in their facilities – and that hurt the coal industry. In 2015, a third of American energy was produced with coal and a third was produced with natural gas. Twenty years prior, more than half of the electricity production in the United States came from burning coal and only 13 percent from gas. That change, for Charles Murray, would be an energy cost problem.
But Murray is also worried about another American energy growth industry: wind and solar energy. As of the end of last year, America produces more energy from wind than from the use of hydroelectric dams – and wind, of course, doesn't produce any greenhouse gas emissions at all. Wind receives some subsidies from the government, which Trump has criticized in the past (though not when asked about them by an Iowa voter whose husband works in the wind industry). That, too, is an energy cost problem to folks like Charles Murray – though advocates of renewable energy would be quick to point out that the failure to regulate the release of carbon dioxide for decades was its own sort of economic gift to the coal industry.
The broader point – and the answer to the question – is that the American energy mix is evolving quickly. The fracking boom meant that net petroleum imports to the United States in 2015 made up about a quarter of all consumption, the smallest percentage in nearly half a century. Complete energy independence is unlikely for a number of reasons, but lower fuel prices, increased American production and shifting energy systems make "energy independence" look somewhat different than it used to.
5. Will Trump’s actions make climate change worse?
The United States has consistently been the biggest per capita producer of greenhouse gases. We are not, however, the biggest emitter of them overall – China is.
For years, this was a point of argument against the United States taking action to address climate change: It's a global problem and China pollutes more than we do, so why should we limit ourselves economically when China doesn't?
In 2014, Obama announced a landmark agreement with China to do exactly that. Obama also committed the United States to a more sweeping climate agreement, the 2015 Paris Accord – an agreement from which Trump once said he would withdraw but which isn't included in his new actions.
Globally, the trend is clear: movement away from traditional fossil-fuel-burning power plants – particularly coal-burning ones – and toward cleaner and renewable sources. That's also the trend in the United States, for reasons beyond government regulatory actions.
So, while Trump can unwind Obama's climate legacy to some extent, the economic and political forces that have spurred those underlying shifts are largely beyond his control. His efforts will likely mean that the United States' greenhouse gas emissions – which were lower for much of Obama's administration largely because of the economic slowdown – may tick upward. But the good news for that majority of the country worried about the threat of climate change is that Trump mostly can't touch that broader global trend.