Newsom tells world leaders Trump’s retreat on the environment will mean economic harm
SACRAMENTOย โย Gov. Gavin Newsom told world leaders Friday that President Trumpโs retreat from efforts to combat climate change would decimate the U.S. automobile industry and surrender the future economic viability to China and other nations embracing the transition to renewable energy.
Newsom, appearing at the Munich Security Conference in Germany, urged diplomats, business leaders and policy advocates to forcefully stand up to Trumpโs global bullying and loyalty to the oil and coal industry. The California governor said the Trump administrationโs massive rollbacks on environmental protection will be short-lived.
โDonald Trump is temporary. Heโll be gone in three years,โ Newsom said during a Friday morning panel discussion on climate action. โCalifornia is a stable and reliable partner in this space.โ
Newsomโs comments came in the wake of the Trump administrationโs repeal of the endangerment finding and all federal vehicle emissions regulations. The endangerment finding is the U.S. governmentโs 2009 affirmation that planet-heating pollution poses a threat to human health and the environment.
Environmental Protection Agency administrator Lee Zeldin said the finding has been regulatory overreach, placing heavy burdens on auto manufacturers, restricting consumer choice and resulting in higher costs for Americans. Its repeal marked the โsingle largest act of deregulation in the history of the United States of America,โ he said.
Scientists and experts were quick to condemn the action, saying it contradicts established science and will put more people in harmโs way. Independent researchers around the world have long concluded that greenhouse gases released by the burning of gasoline, diesel and other fossil fuels are warming the planet and worsening weather disasters.
The move will also threaten the U.S.โs position as a leader in the global clean energy transition, with nations such as China pulling ahead on electric vehicle production and investments in renewables such as solar, batteries and wind, experts said.
Newsomโs trip to Germany is just his latest international jaunt in recent months as he positions himself to lead the Democratic Partyโs opposition to Trump and the Republican-led Congress, and to seed a possible run for the White House in 2028. Last month Newsom traveled to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, and in November to the U.N. climate summit in Belรฉm, Brazil โ mocking and condemning Trumpโs policies on Greenland, international trade and the environment.
When asked how he would restore the worldโs confidence in the United States if he were to become president, Newsom sidestepped. Instead he offered a campaign-like soliloquy on Californiaโs success on fostering Tesla and the nationโs other top electric vehicle manufacturers as well as being a magnet for industries spending billions of dollars on research and development for the global transition away from carbon-based economies.
The purpose of the Munich conference was to open a dialogue among world leaders on global security, military, economic and environmental issues. Along with Fridayโs discussion on climate action, Newsom is scheduled to appear at a livestreamed forum on transatlantic cooperation Saturday.
Andrew Forrest, executive chairman of the Australia-based mining company giant Fortescue, said during a panel Friday his company is proof that even the largest energy-consuming companies in the world can thrive without relying on the carbon-based fuels that have driven industries for more than a century. Fortescue, which buys diesel fuel from countries across the world, will transition to a โgreen gridโ this decade, saving the company a billion dollars a year, he said.
โThe science is absolutely clear, but so is the economics. I am, and my company Fortescue is, the industrial-grade proof that going renewable is great economics, great business, and if you desert it, then in the end, youโll be sorted out by your shareholders or by your voters at the ballot box,โ Forrest said.
Newsom said California has also shown the world what can be done with innovative government policies that embrace electric vehicles and the transition to a non-carbon-based economy, and continues to do so despite the attacks and regressive mandates being imposed by the Trump administration.
โThis is about economic prosperity and competitiveness, and thatโs why Iโm so infuriated with what Donald Trump has done,โ Newsom said. โRemember, Tesla exists for one reason โ Californiaโs regulatory market, which created the incentives and the structure and the certainty that allowed Elon Musk and others to invest and build that capacity. We are not walking away from that.โ
California has led the nation in the push toward EVs. For more than 50 years, the state enjoyed unique authority from the EPA to set stricter tailpipe emission standards than the federal government, considered critical to the stateโs efforts to address its notorious smog and air-quality issues. The authority, which the Trump administration has moved to rescind, was also the basis for Californiaโs plan to ban the sale of new gasoline-powered cars by 2035.
The administration again targeted electric vehicles in its announcement on Thursday.
โThe forced transition to electric vehicles is eliminated,โ Zeldin said. โNo longer will automakers be pressured to shift their fleets toward electric vehicles, vehicles that are still sitting unsold on dealer lots all across America.โ
But the efforts to shut down the energy transition may be too little, too late, said Hannah Safford, former director of transportation and resilience at the White House Climate Policy Office under the Biden administration.
โElectric cars make more economic sense for people, more models are becoming available, and the administration canโt necessarily stop that from happening,โ said Safford, who is now associate director for climate and environment at the Federation of American Scientists.
Still, some automakers and trade groups supported the EPAโs decision, as did fossil fuel industry groups and those geared toward free markets and regulatory reform. Among them were the Independent Petroleum Assn. of America, which praised the administration for its โefforts to reform and streamline regulations governing greenhouse gas emissions.โ
Ford, which has invested in electric vehicles and recently completed a prototype of a $30,000 electric truck, said in a statement to The Times that it appreciated EPAโs move โto address the imbalance between current emissions standards and consumer choice.โ
Toyota, meanwhile, deferred to a statement from Alliance for Automotive Innovation president John Bozzella, who said similarly that โautomotive emissions regulations finalized in the previous administration are extremely challenging for automakers to achieve given the current marketplace demand for EVs.โ