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Trump baselessly questions climate science during California wildfire briefing

President Donald Trump on Monday baselessly asserted that climate change is not playing a role in the catastrophic wildfires overtaking forests across the west, rebutting an official briefing him who pleaded for the President listen to the science.

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By
Maegan Vazquez
, CNN
CNN — President Donald Trump on Monday baselessly asserted that climate change is not playing a role in the catastrophic wildfires overtaking forests across the west, rebutting an official briefing him who pleaded for the President listen to the science.

"I don't think science knows, actually," Trump said at a Monday briefing with officials in McClellan Park, California, with a laugh.

He told Wade Crowfoot, secretary of California's Natural Resources Agency: "It'll start getting cooler. You just watch."

Crowfoot had warned the President of the dangers of ignoring the science and putting "our head in the sand and thinking that it's all about forest management."

Climate experts tell CNN due to human-caused climate change, temperature extremes are climbing higher and the vegetation is drier, which affects fire behavior.

Trump was also directly confronted by the state's Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom, who has been adamant about climate change's role in the wildfires, bluntly telling the President: "Climate change is real."

"We obviously feel very strongly the hots are getting hotter," Newsom said. "The dries are getting drier. When we're having heat domes, the likes of which we've never seen in our history."

"We come from a perspective, humbly, where the science is in, and observed evidence is self-evident that climate change is real and that is exacerbating this," the governor added.

Newsom told Trump to "please respect -- and I know you do -- the difference of opinion out here as it relates to this fundamental issue on the issue of climate change."

"Absolutely," Trump responded.

Trump and California officials did agree that continued federal assistance with forest management was necessary.

Just before his briefing, Trump was asked by a reporter what role climate change was playing in the fires.

"Well, I think this is more of a management situation. If you look at other countries, if you go to other countries in Europe, Austria, Finland ... they're forest nations. They're in forests and they don't have problems like this," the President responded.

The President also suggested that other nations need to take responsibility for their levels of pollution more than the US, because the US is "just a small speck."

But when it comes to greenhouse gas emissions, the US doesn't represent a "speck." While US emissions declined in 2019,the US is still the world's second-largest contributor of planet-warming gases.

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