Plenty of numbers differentiate President-elect Donald Trump from Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.
There's 270, the number of electoral votes it took for Trump to be declared the winner of presidential election. There's about 206,000, the number by which Clinton led the popular vote on the evening of November 9.
There's also 3.4 billion, the number of additional tons of carbon dioxide that the emerging-technology research firm Lux Research expects the US would emit in two terms of a Trump presidency, compared with a theoretical two-term Clinton administration.
That's a disconcerting amount of CO2, as meteorologist Eric Holthaus said on Twitter after the election:
Climate modelers have already factored in the impact of a Trump presidency & it's not pretty.
It's more important than ever not to give up. pic.twitter.com/IycKwRGY50
— Eric Holthaus (@EricHolthaus) November 9, 2016
Granted, we don't know that a Trump administration will follow up on every climate-related policy mentioned during the campaign. But Lux analysts say that if Trump follows through on canceling President Barack Obama's Clean Power Plan and on backing out of the Paris agreement, we can expect some drastic changes.
"As independent analysts, we don't endorse candidates, but the data and analysis clearly show that energy policy and the resulting emissions will go in very different directions under Clinton and Trump," Yuan-Sheng Yu, a Lux Research analyst, said in a press release.
Already there are indications that Trump plans to nominate controversial climate skeptic Myron Ebell to lead transition plans for the Environmental Protection Agency.
Still, as Andrew Revkin writes for The New York Times, much of what affects the global climate at this point is out of the hands of individual politicians — market trends toward cleaner energy will continue, and at some point devastating air quality and "other fundamental forces will continue to drive polluted China and smog-choked India to move away from unfettered coal combustion as a path to progress."
But there's a lot of work to be done for anyone who thinks a potential 3.4 billion tons of additional CO2 in the atmosphere from the US is too much.
SEE ALSO: 3 reasons researchers are terrified about Donald Trump's presidency
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