Trump’s participation in this year’s G20 wasn’t even certain until late Friday, when it appeared on his official schedule. Trump has made no secret of his distaste for large multilateral summits, questioning their value in conversations with aides.
He delivered remarks during the opening session, but they weren’t made public by the summit organizers and the White House did not provide a copy of them. Later Saturday, Trump was at his golf course when a side-session on global pandemic preparedness was convened that featured speeches from French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and others.
Trump chose to focus instead on his conservation record in the United States, saying under his administration “environmental stewardship is a sacred obligation.”
He said he’d worked to prevent children from being exposed to lead in drinking water, touted a pledge to plant 1 billion new trees and said he’d done more than any president for US national parks since Teddy Roosevelt.
But Trump also heralded his efforts to expand American fossil fuels, despite their role in fueling climate change.
“The United States is now the number one producer of oil and natural gas in the world,” he said, citing horizontal drilling and fracking.
“Every day we are proving we can protect our workers, create new jobs and safeguard the environment without imposing crippling mandates and one-sided international agreements on our citizens,” he said.
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