President-elect Donald Trump today announced fossil fuel industry ally Scott Pruitt, a global warming skeptic, as his pick to head the Environmental Protection Agency, signalling America's commitment to battle climate change could be in jeopardy.
It was Trump's latest step to fill out his all-important cabinet in the weeks before the maverick billionaire takes the helm of the planet's largest economy, with observers worldwide on tenterhooks over how he will conduct policy on climate, national security, trade and immigration.
The Republican's victory shocked the US establishment and alarmed many who are waiting to see if the political novice follows through on a slew of threats to tear up free trade agreements, abandon treaties and punish American companies that offshore jobs.
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He also will reportedly announce retired general John Kelly to run the Department of Homeland Security. Kelly would be the third general named to Trump's inner circle, amid some concern that Trump is surrounding himself with military figures in civilian posts.
But Trump's choice of Oklahoma Attorney General Pruitt as EPA administrator has outraged many Trump opponents who fear for the fate of President Barack Obama's efforts to combat climate change.
"For too long, the Environmental Protection Agency has spent taxpayer dollars on an out-of-control anti-energy agenda that has destroyed millions of jobs, while also undermining our incredible farmers and many other businesses and industries at every turn," Trump said in a statement.
Pruitt "will reverse this trend and restore the EPA's essential mission of keeping our air and our water clean and safe."
The EPA chief has a strong impact on US actions to combat climate change: the agency both determines what international commitments the country is able to make, and implements them.
Opponents scoffed at Trump's suggestion that Pruitt will be a capable steward of the environment, pointing out he has spent much of his time battling the very agency he is now tapped to lead
"Scott Pruitt has spent the past several years fighting tooth and nail to help polluters erase or circumvent the critical environmental protections our nation has put in place," said Steny Hoyer, the number two Democrat in the House of Representatives.
"There is nothing good about this," Michael Burger, executive director of the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia Law School, told AFP.
"Pruitt is a known conspirator with the fossil fuel industry and I mean that in a literal sense," he said, pointing to the Oklahoman's 2014 efforts with oil companies to battle EPA regulations.
Ken Kimmell, president of the Union of Concerned Scientists, described Pruitt as "someone who is on the outer extreme edge, and putting him in charge of EPA could really have devastating consequences" as Pruitt will likely seek to dismantle Obama's Clean Power Plan.
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