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Note, as a podcast, we stand for factual information (any bias should be backed with claims although we tried not to be biased except for at the very end of the pod) - everything here has been factually collected to the best of our knowledge. We support climate improvements and the use of green tech, though we do not necessarily align with any political party. The little 'two cents' at the end was based on online data to look at the potential power of green tech in killing two birds with one stone, not any direct criticism to the global leaders.
Today we’re looking at Donald Trump’s 2025 withdrawal from the Paris Agreement—what it means, why it happened, and how different stakeholders are reacting.
This marks the second time the U.S. has left the Paris Agreement under Trump. He first pulled the country out in 2017, only for the U.S. to rejoin under President Joe Biden in 2021. Now, under Trump’s second presidency, the U.S. has once again withdrawn.
Why did he make this decision again? How are businesses, world leaders, and environmental groups responding? And what does this mean for global climate efforts? We'll look at these questions in todays episode.
Gmail: [email protected]
Instagram/X: theenvironmentalreview
Note, as a podcast, we stand for factual information (any bias should be backed with claims although we tried not to be biased except for at the very end of the pod) - everything here has been factually collected to the best of our knowledge. We support climate improvements and the use of green tech, though we do not necessarily align with any political party. The little 'two cents' at the end was based on online data to look at the potential power of green tech in killing two birds with one stone, not any direct criticism to the global leaders.
Today we’re looking at Donald Trump’s 2025 withdrawal from the Paris Agreement—what it means, why it happened, and how different stakeholders are reacting.
This marks the second time the U.S. has left the Paris Agreement under Trump. He first pulled the country out in 2017, only for the U.S. to rejoin under President Joe Biden in 2021. Now, under Trump’s second presidency, the U.S. has once again withdrawn.
Why did he make this decision again? How are businesses, world leaders, and environmental groups responding? And what does this mean for global climate efforts? We'll look at these questions in todays episode.
Gmail: [email protected]
Instagram/X: theenvironmentalreview