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Joe Biden and Donald Trump are heading for their final face-to-face showdown on Thursday at the last presidential debate as the window closes for them to convince American voters before election day in under two weeks’ time.
Mr Biden has been at home in Delaware prepping for the event while the president has spent the week bouncing from campaign stop to campaign stop as he tries to alter the trajectory of the race which has him trailing the former VP in almost every poll.
The debate, scheduled for 22 October from 9pm-10.30pm (Eastern Time) in Nashville, Tennessee, will focus on six topics selected by the moderator, NBC's Kristen Welker.
The topics for the final debate are: "Fighting COVID-19," "American Families," "Race in America," "Climate Change," "National Security" and "Leadership."
The debate commission announced that candidates will have their microphones muted as their opponent gives his opening two-minute answer to each question, following a chaotic first debate full of interruptions largely by Mr Trump.
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What has President Trump said about climate change?
The president has waxed and waned from outright climate change denial to misleading GOP talking points.
“When trees fall down after a short period of time, they become very dry — really like a matchstick. And they can explode. Also leaves. When you have dried leaves on the ground, it’s just fuel for the fires,” Mr Trump said.
California’s State Natural Resources Agency Secretary, Wade Crowfoot, urged the president to “recognise the changing climate and what it means to our forests".
“If we ignore that science and sort of put our head in the sand and think it’s all about vegetation management, we’re not going to succeed together protecting Californians,” Mr Crowfoot added.
Mr Trump responded: “It will start getting cooler, just you watch.”
The state official pushed back, saying that he wished the science agreed with the president.
The president countered: "I don’t think science knows, actually.”
Over the years, the President has called it a “hoax” and told the Washington Post that he is "not a big believer in man-made climate change".
He has blamed China (then later said it was a "joke") and pointed to snaps of freezing weather as evidence that global heating isn’t happening.
"In the beautiful Midwest, windchill temperatures are reaching minus 60 degrees, the coldest ever recorded. In coming days, expected to get even colder. People can’t last outside even for minutes. What the hell is going on with Global Waming? [sic] Please come back fast, we need you!" he tweeted in January 2019.
(A day later, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration appeared to respond with a tweet that read, "winter storms don't prove that global warming isn't happening" and a link to an explainer).
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What is his plan to tackle climate change?
The brief list of bullet points appear under headline themes similar to issues which Mr Trump campaigned on in 2016, like “Drain The Swamp” and “End Illegal Immigration And Protect American Workers”.
There’s no mention of climate change or the environment.
“Over the coming weeks, the President will be sharing additional details about his plans through policy-focused speeches on the campaign trail,” the agenda notes.
The Independent sought comment from the Trump campaign’s press office for updates on the president’s plan to tackle climate change but had received no response at the time of publication.
During questions on climate change at the last debate, Mr Trump said: “You know we’re planting a billion trees, a billion-tree project.”
This month, he signed an executive order making the US government part of a global tree planting initiative but did not commit to a number of trees.
“The fossil fuel carbon is so much bigger than all the carbon in the trees. You can’t do carbon neutral by planting trees ... it’s sort of a band aid,' University of Chicago geophysical sciences professor David Archer previously told The Hill.
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What is Mr Trump’s record on climate change?
In his first year as president, Mr Trump withdrew from the Paris Accord, the global agreement involving almost every nation on earth to reduce the human-caused greenhouse gas emissions that are driving the climate crisis. If Mr Trump wins a second term, the US will officially exit the deal on the day after the election.
He quashed the Obama administration’s Clean Power Plan - which set the first-ever limits on power plants, the largest source of carbon pollution in the US.
The president has rolled back nearly 100 environmental rules, according to a tally kept by the New York Times. The greatest number focused on air pollution and emissions.
He has watered down vehicle fuel-efficiency standards, also established during the Obama-era, which had aimed to encourage auto-makers to ramp up electric vehicle production, and ended a waiver that allowed California and some other states to apply their own stricter standards.
Mr Trump has cosied up to the fossil fuel industry throughout his presidency and supported its expansion, reversing President Obama’s decisions to deny permits for pipelines like the Dakota Access site and Keystone XL. Some of the industry’s most powerful figures have subsequent showered him in campaign donations, E&E News reported.