Rex Tillerson Disappoints

The nominee gave vague, canned answers on climate change

Today’s confirmation hearing of Rex Tillerson, Trump’s nominee for Secretary of State, has concluded. During the day, there were two impassioned exchanges about climate change, during which Tillerson revealed how naive environmentalists were that he might be able to sway Trump on the issue.

First, Senator Tim Kaine (our almost-VP) excoriated Tillerson on ExxonMobil’s record of publicly denying the science of climate change despite their internal scientists affirming the causal connection between fossil fuels and climate change. When pressed about the veracity of these allegations, Tillerson refused to answer. Sen. Kaine asked him to clarify that he was divesting all of his financial interest in the company, and was under no confidentiality agreement, which Tillerson confirmed. Yet Tillerson still refused to discuss Exxon’s history of climate science denial. Essentially, Kaine made Tillerson enunciate his formal objectivity while admitting his in-practice loyalty to the oil company.

Second, Senator Tom Udall questioned Tillerson about his personal views of climate change science and the Paris deal. Tillerson provided general responses about the “facts on the ground” of climate change, while also hedging on whether human activity is the cause, saying there are “some” scientists that say it is, and “some” that disagree, as if the numbers were at all comparable. When Udall pointed this out, Tillerson merely repeated himself. On the Paris deal, Tillerson repeatedly limited his answers to saying he thought the U.S. should “have a seat at the table” and that there must be a global effort. Again, when Udall pointed out the emptiness of those statements, saying that a person can be sitting at a table and still be completely silent, and that the argument about global efforts are now moot, since the U.S. is the only major global power even wavering on the issue, Tillerson once again simply repeated his prepared remarks.

If environmentalists were pinning their hopes on Tillerson to move Trump toward the position on climate change held by 97% of the world, they have been sorely disappointed.

Reader Comments

2 Replies to “Rex Tillerson Disappoints”

  1. I think that most environmentalists look at Tillerson, Perry, Pruitt as appointments that reflect Trump’s views, not that they could somehow change the President-elect’s mind.

  2. Mr Tillerson is far more credible than California Governor Brown on climate issues. Governor Brown makes outrageous bogus exaggerations about the threat of climate catastrophes,Tillerson does not. Brown aggressively squanders enormous public resources on phony and fraudulent climate mitigation scams that do not work and never will. Mr Tillerson has integrity and is more responsible, he would not foolishly waste taxpayers money.

    Mr. Tillerson is careful accurate and honest in his public statements about climate. Brown is misinformed, dishonest and incompetent.

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About Sarah

Sarah Duffy is a Shapiro Fellow in Environmental Law and Policy at UCLA School of Law. Her research interests include water conservation, state-level climate change poli…

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About Sarah

Sarah Duffy is a Shapiro Fellow in Environmental Law and Policy at UCLA School of Law. Her research interests include water conservation, state-level climate change poli…

READ more