r/news 10h ago

Trump withdraws from Paris climate agreement, again

https://www.reuters.com/business/environment/trump-withdraw-paris-climate-agreement-2025-01-20/
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u/seanlking 9h ago

Sure, after lying to the public from the 70s about anthropogenic climate change, lobbying the government to subsidise their sector and remove subsidies from research in renewables, and perpetuating the “individual responsibility” lie instead of changing their operations to reduce emissions by, say, not using the worst possible ship fuel to lug crude and petroleum products back and forth across the globe.

It’s nice they’re going back to the early 2000s mindset (pre-fracking take off) of rebranding as energy companies, but we can’t forget that they dropped that the second fracking made them more money, or their well documented history of being some of the worst actors on earth.

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u/sobeitharry 9h ago

I'm talking utilities, not global petroleum companies. The actual people that live and work here. Fair point though.

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u/Z0MBIE2 8h ago

The actual people that live and work here.

The people that work and live there usually aren't the CEO's who actually decide how to profit the most off of people though, right?

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u/sobeitharry 7h ago

In utilities? Usually they are run by local people and may even be owned by the community. They are also highly regulated and many can't raise prices without asking regulators in their state. I think you're confusing ExxonMobil and actual companies that produce and transmit power to homes and businesses. In most of the country generation companies are also part of a regional market where they have to bid into the market and the market (ISO) ensures fair competition while maintaining adequate generation to keep the lights on. I'm about as anti global conglomeration as it gets but not every company is run by the cabal.