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U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with House and Senate leadership in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Tuesday, June 6, 2017. Trump is bringing lawmakers to the White House in hopes of kick-starting his legislative agenda while Washington focuses on the latest twists and turns in the Russia investigation. Photographer: Olivier Douliery/Pool via Bloomberg Image Credit: Bloomberg

Reactions to United States President Donald Trump’s withdrawal from the Paris accord on climate change are — forgive me — overheated. The American Civil Liberties Union is calling it an “assault on communities of colour”, for some reason, and environmental activist Tom Steyer says it’s a “traitorous act of war against the American people”. For his part, Trump says that staying in the agreement would have assured America a future of “lost jobs, lower wages, shuttered factories and vastly diminished economic production”.

Yet, Trump and his critics alike know that very little in the accord is binding on the parties to it. As a result, withdrawing from it can’t have major consequences by itself.

Listen carefully to the agreement’s supporters, and their real argument becomes clear: For them, staying in it increases the likelihood that the world’s governments will take future steps to avert what they believe will be a climate catastrophe.

The best argument for leaving, meanwhile, is that these steps would be costly overreactions to that threat — and reducing such consequences is a good thing. The risk that climate change will have catastrophic effects justifies investing to predict, mitigate and adapt to those effects. It doesn’t justify restrictions on the use of energy.

The argument that leaving the Paris agreement will jeopardise America’s global leadership also seems overblown. The decision dismays many people around the world, to be sure, just as other American decisions have dismayed many of the same people over the years. We are told that other governments will no longer trust America to keep its commitments. But it would not be a bad thing for other countries to learn that a president’s say-so can’t always bind future presidents.

It’s a mistake, too, to see Trump’s decision as a turn towards isolationism. It’s true that the step cheers those in his coalition who want the US to weaken its alliances and enact tariffs. But it also has the support of conservatives and Republicans who oppose those policies. That breadth of support helps explain why Trump made this move while so far refraining from tearing up the North Atlantic Free Trade Agreement and the like.

Trump has even talked, albeit very vaguely and implausibly, about renegotiating the Paris agreement. It would be better to take a different path altogether, but America is free to go in any number of directions, since it is essentially in the same place it was when it was in the agreement.

— Bloomberg

Ramesh Ponnuru is a Bloomberg View columnist. He is a senior editor of National Review and the author of The Party of Death: The Democrats, the Media, the Courts, and the Disregard for Human Life.