But facts muddy that claim.
Data show that the US is among the dirtiest countries when it comes to heat-trapping carbon pollution. One nation that has cleaner air in nearly every way is Sweden.
"The US is well behind other countries in having the cleanest and most sustainable environment," University of Michigan environmental scientist Rosina Bierbaum said in an email.
The US emits more carbon dioxide than any other nation except China. In 2014, the US spewed 237 times more carbon dioxide into the air than Sweden, according to figures by the US Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
The US is No 2 in per person carbon dioxide pollution, behind Luxembourg, among 35 developed nations plus China, India and Brazil, Energy Department data show. That's 19.1 tons (17.3 metric tons) of carbon dioxide per year for the average American, compared with 4.9 tons (4.5 metric tons) for the average Swede.
Taking into account economics, the U.S. Ranks 10th highest in carbon pollution per gross domestic product behind China, India, Russia, Estonia, Poland, South Korea, the Czech Republic, Mexico and Turkey, according to the International Energy Agency.
Because carbon dioxide stays in the atmosphere for more than a century, scientists and regulators say it's more important to look at historical emissions. Since 1870, the US has produced about one-quarter of the world's carbon dioxide, twice as much as China, and that makes it the biggest polluter in the world by far, Peters said.
In some traditional air pollution measurements, the United States is cleaner than most nations, said William K Reilly, who headed the US Environmental Protection Agency under Republican President George HW Bush.
The US is better than most of the world when it comes to dangerous soot or fine particles. Among industrialised countries, the US tied for sixth cleanest, according to the Health Effects Institute.
It's also tied for sixth smoggiest in the world with Turkey, according to the institute .
"There are a number of countries that have cleaner air in terms of major industrial nations. We are certainly in the top core," said Dan Greenbaum, the group's president. "Clearly, countries like China and India are much, much worse than we are.
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