Nigeria, Jan. 29 -- As a climate change professional with a decade of experience, beginning with my doctoral research on carbon capture and storage to my current science-to-policy work on climate change mitigation, I often face questions about the implications of Donald Trump's return to the White House for climate change. Trump's well-documented denial of climate change understandably raises concerns, but I argue that the climate action movement has evolved into a resilient global force that will endure and thrive, even under Trump's administration. Of course, Trump's "drill baby drill" rhetoric suggests a renewed emphasis on fossil fuel extraction, but the momentum for climate action is rooted in powerful economic, technological and pol...