Trump anti-climate ghost hangs over UN meeting
9/5/17
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U.S. President Donald Trump |
The Paris
pact was savaged by Donald Trump during his presidential campaign.
For the first time since Donald Trump’s ascent to the White House, UN
negotiators gather next week to draft rules to take forward the climate-rescue
Paris Agreement he has threatened to abandon.
The mid-year round of haggling in Bonn
is meant to begin work on a crucial rulebook for signatories of the pact.
But it risks being sidetracked by mounting uncertainty over the world’s
number two carbon polluter, with Trump at its helm.
“This was supposed to be a highly technical and uneventful meeting to flesh
out some of the details in the Paris Agreement. But, obviously, the speculation
coming out of Washington is now at the top of
our minds,” the Maldives
environment and energy minister, Thoriq Ibrahim, told
AFP.
He chairs the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS), a key negotiating
bloc in the UN climate forum which will meet from May 8-18.
The deal was sealed at the 21st so-called “Conference of Parties” (COP 21)
in the French capital in December 2015, after years of haggling.
A diplomatic push led by Trump’s predecessor, Barack Obama, and China’s Xi
Jinping, saw 195 countries and the EU bloc — 196 parties in total — OK the deal
to the popping of champagne corks. Palestine
has also since joined.
The agreement sets the goal of limiting average global warming to two
degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-Industrial Revolution levels
— and 1.5 C if possible.
This will be done by curbing planet-warming greenhouse-gas emissions from
burning oil, coal and gas — an objective to which countries have pledged
voluntary, nationally-determined “contributions”.
Scientists project that on current pledges, Earth is on track for warming of
around 3C — a scenario that would doom the planet to potentially catastrophic
droughts, floods, and rising seas.
Distraction
Widely hailed as the last chance to stave off worst-case-scenario global
warming, the Paris
pact was savaged by Trump during his presidential campaign.
He called climate change a “hoax” perpetrated by China, and promised to “cancel” the
deal as president.
With the rest of the world on tenterhooks ever since, Trump has said he will
make his decision before the next G7 meeting on May 26-27 in Sicily.
“The question of whether this creates a difficult backdrop for the
negotiations is clearly a ‘yes’,” said Paula Caballero, who heads the climate
programme at the Washington-based World Resources Institute (WRI).
A State Department official confirmed a US
delegation will travel to Bonn,
though a “much smaller” one than in recent years.
“We are focused on ensuring that decisions are not taken at these meetings
that would prejudice our future policy, undermine the competitiveness of US
businesses, or hamper our broader objective of advancing US economic growth and
prosperity,” said the official, asked about the negotiators’ brief.
Some fear a US
withdrawal from the agreement would dampen enthusiasm for ramping up national
emissions-cutting targets, required to bring them in line with the 2C target.
“I can see some countries… saying: ‘Well, why should we do more if the US is doing
less?’,” said Alden Meyer of the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), a veteran
observer of the climate negotiations.
Funding cuts
The Trump administration has already proposed slashing funds for the UN’s
climate convention, which hosts the negotiations; for the UN climate science
panel; and for the Green Climate Fund that helps poor countries combat global
warming.
There has been a chorus of appeals from business leaders, politicians and
NGOs for the US
not to abandon the agreement.
Much of the pressure is at home, where businesses, majors and governors have
pledged to pursue a clean energy track with or without Trump.
Observers say the momentum, politically at least, is unstoppable.
At the last COP, held in Marrakesh
in November, news of Trump’s election served to spur countries into reaffirming
their commitment to the pact.
“International leadership on climate is more diffuse than before, and other
countries are stepping up to lead both within and outside of negotiations,”
said Caballero — pointing at major polluters China and India cutting back on
coal.
In fact, the US
may stand to lose the most — in both political and economic influence.
“It would leave America
behind while other countries are benefiting from the huge economic
opportunities of a transition to cleaner economies,” said Caballero.
Negotiators in Bonn, while attempting to take
the pulse of the US
delegation, must make progress on the “rulebook” which has an adoption deadline
of end-2018.
The guide must clarify what kind of information countries include when they
report on emissions, for example, and what counts as a contribution to climate
finance.
The next COP, chaired by Fiji,
will be held in Bonn
in November.
All comments [ 5 ]
The US is one of the biggest factors that destroy the climate of the world
Trump is using money to trade for environmental destruction
The mad Trump is trying to cancel the Paris pact which all nations in the world have been building to protect the environment for the future generations.
Earth is on track for warming of around 3C – a scenario that would doom the planet to potentially catastrophic droughts, floods, and rising seas.
the US may stand to lose the most – in both political and economic influence
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