Can Ivanka Trump Save the World From Her Father
Can Ivanka Trump Save the World From Her Father · The Fiscal Times

If the world stands any chance of surviving the worst effects of global warming, it may take the stubborn intervention of First Daughter Ivanka Trump to blunt the worst instincts of her father’s administration.

Trump, the glamorous New York fashion designer, is not officially a member of the Trump White House like her husband, Jared Kushner. But she has informally served as one of the few voices of reason on climate change within a new Republican administration populated with a few key climate change skeptics. And that begins with President Trump himself who once called climate change a “hoax” perpetrated by the Chinese.

Related: The Senate Just Confirmed the EPA’s Arch Enemy to Run the Agency

Her efforts are noble in the eyes of many environmentalists, and she has the advantage of being her father’s favorite child. But if the latest reports of environmental disregard within the Trump administration are true, then her prospects for success are slim indeed.

Bloomberg reported Tuesday that Trump is preparing to sign a set of “sweeping directives” to dramatically reduce the role that climate change plays in a wide range of government decisions, from creating appliance standards to the approval of new pipeline construction like the Keystone XL Pipeline.

These new orders would go well beyond a targeted attack on Obama administration measures blocking coal leasing and curtailing greenhouse gas emissions from power plants, the report says. The new presidential order would also override the government’s use of a metric known as “the social cost of carbon” which attempts to quantify the social cost of carbon.

Bloomberg also reports the order would eliminate industry restrictions on methane emissions, a potent greenhouse gas.

The Climate Change Crisis Trump Refuses to Acknowledge

Ivanka Trump does have two powerful allies within the cabinet. Defense Secretary General James Mattis considers climate change real and a threat to U.S. national security. He wants to see a reduction in fossil fuels for the armed forces in order to keep them mobile and sustainable. And Secretary of State Rex Tillerson is vigorously arguing against fulfilling the president’s campaign pledge to cancel the 2015 Paris accord that binds most countries to curb global warming, as The New York Times recently reported.

The Obama administration pledged that the U.S. would reduce its carbon pollution about 26 percent from 2005 levels by 2025. Ivanka Trump and Tillerson reportedly fear that pulling out of the landmark climate agreement could have “broad and damaging diplomatic ramifications,” not to mention undermining what former President Obama deemed the “last best hope” to save the planet.