After asking three times "Who believes in global warming?" and soliciting a show of hands, Trump concluded that "nobody" believed climate change was underway except for Andrade.
During today's interview with Wallace, Trump said he needed to balance any environmental regulation against the fact that manufacturers and other businesses in China and elsewhere are able to operate without the kind of restrictions faced by their US competitors.
"If you look at what - I could name country after country. You look at what's happening in Mexico, where our people are just - plants are being built, and they don't wait 10 years to get an approval to build a plant, OK?" he said. "They build it like the following day or the following week. We can't let all of these permits that take forever to get stop our jobs."
The New York businessman made the same critique of the Environmental Protection Agency, to which he has nominated Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt - a climate change sceptic - as the head. Wallace asked whether he was "going to take a wrecking ball to the Obama legacy," to which Trump replied, "No. No. No. I don't want to do that at all. I just want what's right."
"EPA, you can't get things approved. I mean, people are waiting in line for 15 years before they get rejected, OK? " he said. "That's why people don't want to invest in this country."
It is unclear which permit application Trump was referring to, but he has repeatedly criticised EPA rules. And though he has given mixed signals on whether he would back out of the US' voluntary commitments under the Paris climate agreement, it would take several years for the next administration to withdraw now that the agreement has entered into force.
At the urging of daughter Ivanka, Trump has met in the past week with former Vice-President Al Gore and actor Leonardo DiCaprio, both environmental activists. Trump described the sessions as "good meetings" but did not elaborate.