Van Jones is the host of CNN's "The Messy Truth." He is president of The Dream Corps . Follow him on Twitter @VanJones68 . The opinions expressed are his.

(CNN) As usual, Donald Trump is completely upside down on the facts.

In 2015, President Barack Obama created the Clean Power Plan to slow climate disruption. It was the first action ever taken by the US government to cut carbon pollution from existing power plants.

And this week, with the stroke of a pen, President Trump directed the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to take steps to end it

Trump may have just signed a death warrant for our planet (at least, for a planet that is liveable for humans). And the lies he told to justify it have real consequences for real Americans, here and now.

First, Trump says he wants to dismantle the Clean Power Plan because it represents what he calls "job-killing regulation." False -- limited losses in some sectors are dwarfed by gains in others.

The potential for job growth in the clean energy sector dwarfs any potential job growth in the fossil fuel economy. For example, Trump promised the Keystone XL pipeline would create 28,000 jobs when he approved the project. But he had to use a huge multiplier to get to even that low number. In fact, it would create about 3,000 temporary construction jobs and only 35 permanent jobs. That's right: 35 permanent jobs.

By comparison, in 2016 the number of jobs in solar grew 25% from the year prior, according to figures from the nonprofit Solar Foundation , while jobs in the rest of the economy had less than 2% growth. Renewable energy jobs now create jobs 12 times faster than the rest of the economy.

For Trump to ignore this fact is inexcusable and irresponsible. He's actually hurting the people he claims to help by refusing to invest in opportunities for more jobs in the booming clean energy sector.

JUST WATCHED Trump Admin guts Obama-era climate regulations Replay More Videos ... MUST WATCH Trump Admin guts Obama-era climate regulations 03:15

By the way, if Trump really cares about those coal miners he invited to the signing ceremony, he should be doing something about the 20,000 who are sick, retired, and within weeks of losing their health benefits if Congress doesn't act. When will Trump call a press conference about them?

Second, Trump claims that the Clean Power Plan was an EPA overreach -- an abuse of its authority. Again, false. The plan is based on Republican President Richard Nixon's Clean Air Act . And the EPA's authority to fight climate disruption was established by a ruling of conservative Chief Justice John Roberts' Supreme Court, under President George W. Bush. In Massachusetts v. EPA (2007), five justices determined that EPA not only has the authority but also the responsibility to cut pollution if it endangers public health -- which it does.

Photos: The effects of climate change in Sudan Photos: The effects of climate change in Sudan Sand storms – A gigantic cloud of dust known as "Haboob" advances over Sudan's capital, Khartoum. A Haboob usually occurs after a few days of rising temperatures and falling pressures and can change the landscape in the few hours it lasts by depositing enormous quantities of sand -- destroying villages and crops. Hide Caption 1 of 7 Photos: The effects of climate change in Sudan Vulnerability – Sudan has been affected by conflict and civil war for decades and is considered one of the most vulnerable countries in the world. Now, Sudan's ecosystems and natural resources are deteriorating -- temperatures are rising, water supplies are scarce, soil fertility is low and severe droughts are common. Hide Caption 2 of 7 Photos: The effects of climate change in Sudan Rising temperatures – Sudan's temperature is expected to rise significantly between 1.1 °C and 3.1 °C by 2060. As a result of increased temperatures and rainfall which has become erratic and inconsistent, much of Sudan has become increasingly unsuitable for agriculture -- due to either floods, or severe droughts. Hide Caption 3 of 7 Photos: The effects of climate change in Sudan Floods – Since 2013, there have been over 600,000 displacements of people from their homes by flood-related disasters in Sudan. This includes some 122,000 people displaced by floods between June and September this year alone, with Kassala, South Darfur and White Nile states worst affected. Hide Caption 4 of 7 Photos: The effects of climate change in Sudan Displacement – Thousands of displaced Sudanese people have been forced to live in makeshift houses where there's few water points and no food or health services. Hide Caption 5 of 7 Photos: The effects of climate change in Sudan Food insecurity – Children scavenge food and clothing from the Juba Municipal Garbage Dump. Sudan has become one of the most vulnerable countries to climate change because of its effect on food security. 70% of the rural population are reliant on traditional rain-fed agriculture -- for both food and livelihood. Hide Caption 6 of 7 Photos: The effects of climate change in Sudan Livelihoods – A man walks with his sheep in the Abu Shouk camp for Internally Displaced People (IDP), near North Darfur's state capital el-Fasher. According to a report by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), it is estimated 1.9 million people in Sudan will be affected by reduced agricultural and livestock production -- due to smaller farming areas, poor pastures and limited water availability. Hide Caption 7 of 7

Curbing carbon pollution -- and defending America's land, water and people from other potentially lethal threats -- is neither a liberal value nor a conservative value. Protecting Americans from climate chaos is in everyone's interest.

Third, Trump says eliminating environmental regulations will make America great again. Remember when we had burning rivers ? That wasn't so great.

If we follow the Trump trajectory, we're going to be bringing smog back to American cities, accelerating asthma rates in children, putting more poison in the groundwater and costing a lot of Americans their lives.

Trump wants to focus on "job-killing regulations." We should be equally concerned about potentially child-killing de-regulation.

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Government must balance the interests of people's ability to earn a living ... against their ability to actually live. Trump seems to have completely forgotten this.

For example, Kamita Gray in Brandywine, Maryland is living on the frontlines of some of the worst pollution in America. Brandywine is in Prince George's county, which has a population that is 65% African American . This community has three power plants in its backyard already. Two more are being developed. The air quality is so bad there that when the wind blows, people do not leave their homes.

It will be communities like Brandywine that are left to deal with the brunt of fossil fuel pollution from power plants in their neighborhoods. If Trump wants to make America great again, he needs to remember that Brandywine is a part of America, too.