Washington, June 5: US President Donald Trump’s announcement of withdrawal from the Paris Accord has caused a firestorm at home and led to big companies’ revolt, analysts said.
“It goes against smart, profitable economics, smart international policy, against American global leadership, and against ethical and moral stewardship of our planet,” said Washington, D.C. political insider David B. Richardson. The withdrawal from the world’s pre-eminent climate control agreement signed in Paris in 2015 by 197 countries met with widespread and growing disdain from American businesses, Xinhua reported.
Leaving the Paris agreement “has no benefit other than pandering to the conservative movement’s ideological opposition to multilateralism and environmental regulation,” wrote Ben Adler Saturday in a Washington Post article. US 45th President narrowly won the 2016 election with a pro-business “Make America Strong” theme.
But when he ignored even conservative, pro-fossil fuel burning oil giants ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips, who supported the Paris Agreement, he walked into a minefield, political pundits said. Since Trump’s announcement of withdrawal Thursday, a number of famous American businesses jumped away from offering support to his decision.
Last Friday, Under Armour CEO Kevin Plank wrote in the Baltimore Sun, “I disagree with the decision to exit the Paris Accord. Sustainability has always been part of our DNA: it’s integral to how we live and work and is essential to our environment,” Plank wrote.
Ironically, Plank praised Trump’s pro-business approach in February, words that were criticized by other business leaders. Thursday, it was Elon Musk of Tesla and Disney CEO Bob Iger who stepped down from Trump’s business advisory councils to protest the decision to withdraw from the Paris climate deal.
“Climate change is real. Leaving Paris is not good for America or the world,” said Musk.
In addition, CEO Tim Cook of Apple, Andrew Liveris of Dow Chemical Co., and Travis Kalanick of Uber Technologies Inc. jumped ship in the past few days. Thursday, other business giants such as Salesforce, Microsoft, Google, and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg used social media to express their disappointment.
Even those who announced to continue to serve on Trump’s council, such as BlackRock Inc. Chief Executive Larry Fink also expressed different opinions. Fink said he disagreed with the decision to leave the Paris Agreement calling it “a critical step forward in addressing climate change.” “I am a strong believer that our industry needs to have a voice with governments around the world,” he said.
Indo-Asian News Service