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    112 | Fantasy Football and Dynamic Baselines: New Tools for Impact Assessment

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    111 | The False Dichotomy Between Reductions and Removals (Rerun)

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    110| Ecological Economics, Systems Thinking, and the Limits to Growth

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    109 | How Brazil's Quilombola Communities are Planting the Seeds of Sustainability for Small Farms Around the World, with Vasco van Roosmalen of ReSeed

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    108 | The Washington Post’s Head Scratcher of a Carbon Story

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    107 | Francis Bacon and the Prehistory of Climate Finance. Second in an intermittent series on the Untold Story of the Voluntary Carbon Market

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    106 | Steve Discusses the "Tribes of the Climate Realm" on the Smarter Markets Podcast

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    105 | The Role of Carbon Credits in Conservation: A Case Study from Guatemala

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    104 Transition Finance: How Carbon Markets REALLY Work, with David Antonioli

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    103 | Jen Jenkins on Purists, Pragmatists, and Science-Based Targets

009 Climate Change in the Trumpocalypse / Part 1: Initial Reactions

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Transcript

Initial reactions from Marrakesn to Trump Victory in US

I came to year-end climate talks here in Marrakesh with a clear plan to cover the most complicated elements of these talks and break them down for a general audience. I’d intended to focus mostly on how global supply chains would change in response to this process – and I still will – but Donald Trump’s victory in the US presidential election has changed everything.

The talks are continuing, and the Paris Agreement remains in place with or without the United States, but the backroom diplomacy that the Obama administration had proven so adept at – the unofficial talks inside the talks that lay the foundation for the next round – which was credited with getting the treaty ratified so early – that’s gone, and I’ll cover that in more detail in a later piece.

In first hours after Trump’s victory, I spoke to some veterans of this process and found something resembling a consensus: namely, that individual US states and the corporate sector can step in to at least partially fill the void in climate competency.

About the author

Steve Zwick

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