Quebec hopes Trump administration lawsuit doesn’t force California out of carbon market
MONTREAL — The Trump administration won’t slow down Quebec’s progress on reducing carbon emissions, Premier Francois Legault said Wednesday following news that California is being sued for working with the province on fighting climate change.
Legault said he would prefer that California stays in what’s known as a cap and trade system, but he said the program is still viable without the U.S. state. Moreover, Legault told reporters in Quebec City, other U.S. governors have shown interest in joining the program.
The Trump administration filed a lawsuit in California, alleging the state usurped federal power to conduct foreign policy to make international accords when it signed an ongoing agreement with Quebec to limit emissions.
California “veered outside its proper constitutional lane,” Assistant U.S. Attorney General Jeffrey Bossert Clark said in a statement.