5:25 PM 12/14/2018 | Energy
Michael Bastasch | Energy Editor
California Gov. Jerry Brown excoriated the Trump administration’s “behavior” at the United Nations climate summit in Poland, arguing it did “not represent the people of the United States.”
“The United States, I’m sorry to say, does not represent the people of the United States,” Brown said in a video address Thursday to U.N. delegates gathered in Katowice for the summit, called COP24.
“California, Washington, New York, Vermont and many, many other states representing tens of millions of people believe in the science of climate change, believe and demand we reduce our carbon emissions,” the Democrat said.
Brown was reacting to news the U.S. joined with Saudi Arabia, Russia and Kuwait in blocking the conference from “welcoming” a U.N. report on limiting future global to 1.5 degrees Celsius by 2100 — a report called for in the 2015 Paris Agreement. (RELATED: TheDCNF Asked Paris Climate Accord Backers If They’d Support Banning Private Jets. Most Didn’t Respond)
President Donald Trump promised to withdraw the U.S. from the Paris accord in 2020. Brown is one of Trump’s staunchest critics when it comes to the planned Paris withdrawal.
Leaders at #COP24, this is your chance, this is your time. pic.twitter.com/d9YofZtwkm
— Jerry Brown (@JerryBrownGov) December 14, 2018
“We recognize the science undergirding the knowledge we have today on climate change. If we’re going to stay below 1.5 degrees Centigrade from the industrial period we have to take action now,” Brown said.
“The actions and the behavior of the leaders of the United States and Saudi Arabia and Kuwait and Russia and other countries are not acceptable,” Brown added. “This is a suicide mission upon which you have embarked. Pull back.”
However, the U.N. report Brown refers to estimates $122 trillion would be needed to fund the new green energy infrastructure needed to keep global warming below 1.5 degrees Celsius. The report, released in October, also says a carbon tax needed to meet that temperature goal would be as high as $27,000 per ton, or a $240 tax on a gallon of gasoline.

Gov. Jerry Brown speaks during a briefing with State officials as U.S. President Donald Trump, Gov.-elect Gavin Newsom (R) and FEMA head Brock Long (2nd L) look on at the incident command post in Chico, California, U.S., Nov. 17, 2018. REUTERS/Leah Millis.
Thousands of U.N. delegates, government officials and environmentalists gathered for the two-week climate summit in the heart of Poland’s coal country at the beginning of December. So far, the conference has been bogged down by the usual disputes about how countries hand money to poor nations to adapt to global warming.
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres made a desperate plea for countries to agree on key details of the Paris accord, which the Obama administration signed onto in 2016. However, emissions are expected to rise another 3 percent this year, despite the Paris accord going into effect.
“People are dying because of climate change. In fires, in mudslides, in floods, in other parts of the country,” Brown said in his video address. “This is serious stuff. You represent humanity. Over 7 billion people are counting on you.”
“Don’t resort to what will be condemned in future years as nothing less than a criminal enterprise. Wake up!” Brown said.
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first, Jerry, the US has been reducing it’s carbon emissions, all without the draconian power grabbing that you advocate.
second, states are places, they are not sentient and thus incapable of believing in anything let alone “climate change”
third, the people of the united states (including people in the states you mention) have, time and again, when polled put climate change at the very bottom of the priorities that they think Government should address.
A better way to say it would be, ‘Progressives do not represent anybody but Progressives. If you’re not, you might as well not be a citizen.”
Speaking of state governors, I just finished writing a long letter to my own state governor on this very issue of US state’s committing to the Paris Accord. My own state, I am sad to say, has an official governor executive order to commit to this fantasy. I only found out about it, day before yesterday.
In addition to NOAA graphs, I used some of Willis E’s graphics [hope he doesn’t mind] to illustrate the utter waste and futility of setting state goals around unicorn dreams [I was a little more diplomatic than that in my letter — calm, almost lawyer-like terseness, with little emotion, and straight, non-flowery, non-inflamatory choice of words]. I wonder how many seconds my eight toiled-over pages will stay out of the governor’s garbage can.
I’ve never written a letter to the governor before. Maybe I should write to Governor B.
Well, I wrote to Kate Brown here in Oregon. For all the good it did.
Pure and simple – she doesn’t represent me, doesn’t want to, doesn’t care, and she has no concern at all about being voted out of office.
“The United States, I’m sorry to say, does not represent the people of the United States,” Brown said in a video address Thursday to U.N. delegates gathered in Katowice for the summit, called COP24.
“California, Washington, New York, Vermont and many, many other states representing tens of millions of people believe in the science of climate change,”
so everyone of this real belivers may give their donation and leave the realists alone.