Trump’s NAFTA Revision Ignores Climate Change, Bolsters Oil And Gas Industries

Environmental groups loathed NAFTA for helping to outsource pollution to Mexico. The revised deal may make that worse.
|
Open Image Modal
President Donald Trump shakes hands with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at a summit earlier this year.
Christinne Muschi / Reuters

President Donald Trump’s deal to tweak the trade agreement among the United States, Mexico and Canada won early praise for changes meant to raise wages and improve safety regulations on cross-border trucking.

But on Monday, environmental groups panned the accord to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement, arguing it includes “corporate giveaways” for fossil fuel giants, excludes binding agreements on lead pollution and contains no mention of human-caused global warming.

Neither “climate” nor “warming” are among the words in the 31 pages of the new deal’s environment chapter. 

NAFTA was long criticized for encouraging companies to shift polluting operations to Mexico, the poorest country with the laxest environmental rules in the trilateral trade agreement. Particular complaints focused on the investor-state dispute settlement process, a system in which companies have been historically afforded broad corporate rights that override local environmental regulations.

The new deal limits those rights, with one major exception: U.S. oil and gas companies. Under the rules, firms that have, or may at some point obtain, government contracts to drill or build infrastructure like pipelines and refineries in Mexico ― such as ExxonMobil Corp. ― can challenge new environmental safeguards Mexican President-elect Andrés Manuel López Obrador has vowed to erect.

Open Image Modal
A Chevron Corp. oil-drilling platform in the Gulf of Mexico.
Bloomberg via Getty Images

“It’s like saying, ‘From here on, we’re going to protect the henhouse by keeping all animals away, except for foxes, they’re cool,’” Ben Beachy, director of the Sierra Club’s living economy program, said in a phone interview.

That’s not the only giveaway for the oil and gas industry. The updated deal, which requires congressional approval, preserves a provision that requires the U.S. government to automatically approve all gas exports to Mexico, despite another rule mandating regulators consider the public interest.

“We urge Congress to approve” the revised deal, said Mike Sommers, chief of the American Petroleum Institute, the oil and gas industry’s biggest lobby. “Retaining a trade agreement for North America will help ensure the U.S. energy revolution continues into the future.”

“It’s like saying, ‘From here on, we’re going to protect the henhouse by keeping all animals away, except for foxes, they’re cool.'”

- Ben Beachy, Sierra Club

The deal, rebranded the United States Mexico Canada Agreement, tosses aside a standard set of seven multilateral environmental agreements that undergirded the last four U.S. trade deals. USCMA includes enforcement language taken from just one of the environmental accords, weakens the language from another two and makes zero mention of the other four.

“Trump’s trade agreement with Mexico and Canada is a corporate giveaway intended to sharply limit the powers of government to protect people and the planet,” said Doug Norlen, director of economic policy at the nonpartisan Friends of the Earth. “This agreement is an attack on our ability to hold Big Oil and Gas accountable for the damage they cause to our communities.”

USCMA also includes a section on good regulatory practices that Beachy said “would be better named deregulation.”

The rules essentially give corporations an extra opportunity to challenge proposed regulations before they’re finalized, and ask for existing regulations to be repealed.

“We expect that, after Trump is out of office, we’re going to have to work hard to re-regulate,” he said. “Even after Trump leaves office, Trump’s NAFTA (revision) could extend his polluting legacy for years.”

Support HuffPost

At HuffPost, we believe that everyone needs high-quality journalism, but we understand that not everyone can afford to pay for expensive news subscriptions. That is why we are committed to providing deeply reported, carefully fact-checked news that is freely accessible to everyone.

Whether you come to HuffPost for updates on the 2024 presidential race, hard-hitting investigations into critical issues facing our country today, or trending stories that make you laugh, we appreciate you. The truth is, news costs money to produce, and we are proud that we have never put our stories behind an expensive paywall.

Would you join us to help keep our stories free for all? Your will go a long way.

Support HuffPost

Before You Go

Moving Planet: Over 2,000 Climate Rallies in 179 Countries
Hanoi, Vietnam (01 of20)
Open Image Modal
Hundreds of young people joined the bike parade at the Moving Planet Vietnammain event in Hanoi on 24 September 2011
Cape Town, South Africa(02 of20)
Open Image Modal
Moving Planet kicks off from the Cape Town Station forecourt
Dhaka, Bangladesh (03 of20)
Open Image Modal
In Dhaka, the Bangladesh Youth Movement for Climate is thinking about other victims of global warming
Istanbul, Turkey(04 of20)
Open Image Modal
A photo from a Moving Planet demonstration in Istanbul, Turkey
Jaca, Spain(05 of20)
Open Image Modal
Day 1 of the "Fiesta Del Pedal" in the small Spanish Pyrenees town of Jaca.Day 1 one was mostly a children's cycle event and raising awareness about sustainable transport and climate change in the central square, Plaza de Biscós. Days 2 and 3 will be larger cycle rides and rallies across the valley and town
Rampur, Nepal(06 of20)
Open Image Modal
Constitutional Assembly member Shobhakar Parajuli rides with hundreds of other cyclists for a Moving Planet rally in Nepal
Molina, Spain(07 of20)
Open Image Modal
Teachers and students at the University on Youth and Development in Mollina, Spain show their commitment to move our planet towards a more sustainable future.
London, England (08 of20)
Open Image Modal
Citizens rallied together in London to create a “moving aerial” of a bike - sending a strong demand to the UK government to move away from fossil fuels
Dumaguete City, Philippines(09 of20)
Open Image Modal
Thousands marched and rode bicycles down Perdices Street in Dumaguete City to show their support for moving their city beyond fossil fuels, and for the protection of the rights of cyclists
Paris, France (10 of20)
Open Image Modal
People power rivals the Eifel Tower in Paris, France
Sydney, Australia (11 of20)
Open Image Modal
Flying kites with 350.org at Bondi Beach, Australia
Reno, Nevada, USA(12 of20)
Open Image Modal
"Free Tim deChristopher," reads a sign outside the Reno Bike Project in Reno, Utah. De Christopher was arrested on July 26 and sentenced to a two-year prison term for his act of civil disobedience to halt the sale of US lands for fossil fuel development.
Sulaimani, Iraq(13 of20)
Open Image Modal
More than 200 hundred men, women and children rode bicycles, picked up trashfrom the street and informed Iraqi citizens about the importance ofenvironmental protection
Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania(14 of20)
Open Image Modal
Cycling with style and character in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania's MovingPlanet Cycle Caravan
Hong Kong, China (15 of20)
Open Image Modal
"Peddle power for a greener future"
Cairo, Egypt (16 of20)
Open Image Modal
Over 600 Egyptian marchers and cyclists took to the streets for the international day of climate action, Moving Planet. They formed a "Human Nile" -representing the vulnerability of Egypt's precious river to climate change and demanding a clean energy and clean transport future forEgypt and the world.
(17 of20)
Open Image Modal
Haniara, Soloman Islands(18 of20)
Open Image Modal
A 350 Moving Planet Arrow formation created by school students, youths, NGOs and government officers adorned in colours of the country’s National Flag.
Lagos, Nigeria (19 of20)
Open Image Modal
Challenging both young and old to take action to end fossil fuel in Nigeria. People gather on the beach for the Moving the Planet work party in Lagos Nigeria
Unity, Maine, USA(20 of20)
Open Image Modal
Led by Unity College students, over 500 Common Ground Fairgoers raise local organic pumpkins in a massive 350 to celebrate local agriculture solutions to climate change