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Monday, 8 May 2017
Worried world urges Trump not to pull out of Paris climate agreement
Officials around the world warn president not to reverse climate efforts
Trump has already begun to peel away pollution rules imposed by Obama
Floods in Fiji. Pacific island nations are particularly vulnerable to
rising sea levels, and Frank Bainimarama, the Fijian president, has
written to Trump to urge him to stay in the Paris deal.
Photograph: Chameleonseye/Getty Images
Donald Trump’s scorched-earth approach to environmental protections
has shocked current and former government officials overseas who are
waiting nervously to see whether the US will destabilize the Paris climate agreement by pulling out of the deal.
The Guardian has spoken to a number of officials from key countries
before Trump makes a decision on the Paris agreement this month. Trump’s
announcement might come as early as this week.
“Trump’s actions on the climate are worrying,” said Izabella
Teixeira, the former Brazilian environment minister. “Although it is
still too early to be sure what his strategy is for the US, the signs so
far of backsliding are a concern to anyone who was involved in the long
process that lead up to the Paris agreement,” said the veteran
negotiator, who was credited with a key role in securing the
international deal in 2015.
“We certainly could not have imagined this political picture when we
signed the agreement in Paris,” said Teixeira. “It is a concern because
we saw a similar situation when George W Bush came to power and backed
away from the Kyoto protocol”.
The US president has started peeling away many of the pollution rules imposed by Barack Obama’s administration, such as the signature Clean Power Plan, new vehicle emissions standards, clean water regulations, and curbs on toxic discharge from power plants.
Keystone XL and Dakota Access, two major and controversial oil
pipelines, have been approved. Last week, the president ordered reviews
of protected areas on land and water
with the goal of opening them up to further oil and gas drilling. Trump
said he was “unleashing American energy and clearing the way for
thousands and thousands of high-paying American energy jobs.”
The
administration is now mulling whether the US should stay in the Paris
climate agreement, a landmark deal struck by nearly 200 nations to lower
greenhouse gas emissions that was ratified last year. Trump has
previously promised to “cancel” the deal, but his advisers are
reportedly split over whether quitting the compact would be worth the
resulting diplomatic fallout.
Last week a senior UN official warned the US would suffer
economically if it chooses to pull out of Paris, citing the clean energy
jobs that will be created as countries decarbonize their electricity
sources. “There is no doubt where the future is and that is what all the
private sector companies have understood,” Erik Solheim, UN environment
chief, told Reuters.
“The future is green. Obviously if you are not a party to the Paris
agreement, you will lose out. And the main losers of course will be the
people of the United States itself because all the interesting,
fascinating new green jobs would go to China and to the other parts of
the world that are investing heavily in this.”
Pacific island nations particularly vulnerable
to the rising seas, heatwaves and droughts wrought by increasing global
temperatures are particularly alarmed at the sharp reversal in climate
policy by the US, the world’s second largest emitter of greenhouse
gases.
Frank Bainimarama, the prime minister of Fiji, has written to Trump
to urge him to stay within the Paris agreement. Bainimarama will
officially head the UN climate change talks taking place in Bonn, Germany in November. “Climate change is not a hoax. it is frighteningly real,” Bainimarama told
a conference in Melbourne. “Billions of people are losing the ability
to feed themselves. Don’t let the whole side down by leaving, just when
we have a game plan.”
Hilda Heine, the president of the Marshall Islands,
a scattered group of low-lying coral islands, said she was “extremely
disappointed to see the United States seeking to roll back its efforts
to reduce emissions”. She added: “My country’s survival depends on every
country delivering on the promises they made in Paris. Our own
commitment to it will never waiver.”
Given America’s huge emissions and diplomatic clout, its domestic
climate policies are being closely watched by other governments. They
have noted Trump’s intention to cut the Environmental Protection
Agency’s budget by nearly a third – even though Congress had other ideas – and the climate change denial of many in the administration, including the president himself.
“I’m very worried by what is happening in the US regarding climate
change. It was an extraordinarily strong shock to hear that Trump has
signed a decree to revise the clean power plan,” said Ramón Méndez,
former head of Uruguay’s climate policy who was among those who hammered
out the Paris agreement in 2015. “Of all of Trump’s policies, this is
the one with the worst consequences for the world.”
Donald Trump signs executive orders to allow Dakota Access and Keystone XL pipelines to go ahead. Photograph: Shawn Thew/EPA
Without the US – which is responsible for almost a fifth of all
emissions on the planet – Méndez told the Guardian it would be extremely
difficult to reach the goal of keeping temperature rises below 1.5C. It
would also set a bad example. “If an important country like the US,
which has the second biggest emissions after China,
doesn’t abide by the Paris agreement, then the Paris agreement is
broken. It will make it harder for other countries to maintain their
ambitions,” he said.
Mendez said it was “terrifying” that Scott Pruitt, the administrator
of the EPA, has denied that carbon dioxide was a primary driver of
global warming. Pruitt’s denial contradicts the EPA’s own scientists,
although the future visibility of such evidence is in question as the
agency is currently “updating language” on climate change and
regulations on its website.
China: a new global leader on climate?
Should
the US completely vacate the international effort to combat global
warming, many observers consider it an opportunity for China to use the
climate forum to assert itself more forcefully. But Zhang Haibin, a
Peking University expert in climate negotiations, said Beijing was
taking a “wait-and-see attitude” towards Trump’s climate policies.
The academic said that Xie Zhenhua, China’s chief climate change
negotiator, had indicated to him that the Chinese government believed
Washington had “not yet formed a clear global policy on climate change”.
Zhang said he saw only a 40% chance that Trump would follow through
on threats to abandon the Paris agreement. “I think the greater
likelihood is that Trump will end up not pulling out of the pact but
instead adopting a passive approach towards it [and] meeting none of its
commitments. I call it a ‘semi-withdrawal,” he said.
However, Zhang warned that even that kind of reversal would deal a
heavy blow to international efforts to tackle climate change. He
predicted that Trump’s lack of interest in the issue would create “a
vacuum of a global leadership” that would make it harder to reduce
global emissions and finance mechanisms such as the Green Climate Fund.
Many activists have called on China, the world’s largest emitter, to
step up as the global climate champion. Chinese president Xi Jinping
appeared to seize that mantle just days before Trump’s inauguration,
using a speech in Geneva to urge
the US not to derail the Paris agreement and warn: “There is only one
earth in the universe and we mankind have only one homeland.”
However, Zhang rejected the idea that his country was pushing to
become the world’s climate leader. “I think there are two key words to
describe China’s leadership role in combating climate change: one is
‘stabilizer’ and the other is ‘coordinator’,” he said.
“China
should be a climate stabilizer because Trump is someone who is quite
uncertain. China should stabilize the existing international order and
its norms. And China has the ability to connect and integrate all
involved parties in order to build a united global front to combat
climate change.”
Environmentalists hope to slow Trump’s ambitions by using legal
action to entangle attempts to scrap the Clean Power Plan and rewrite
other pollution standards. But those who helped negotiate the previous
US position on climate change fear momentum will be lost at a crucial
juncture in the effort to avoid dangerous warming.
“The Trump people can slow-walk things, and a delay of three of five
years is significant because with climate change we can’t sit and
twiddle our thumbs for too much longer,” said Nathan Hultman, who worked on climate policy at the White House during Obama’s presidency.
“Paris is a robust agreement but other countries looking at us and
saying ‘why should we do anything then?’ is a risk. We are seeing some
shift in leadership but many countries are hoping this a short
withdrawal. This problem isn’t going away.”
Hultman, who has attended international climate talks for more than
20 years as a negotiator or observer, said Trump’s administration is
“far more unpredictable” than that of Bush, which withdrew the US from
the Kyoto climate agreement.
“Unlike the George W Bush administration, there’s now no clear core
ideology or advising strategy as to how decisions are made,” he said.
“There was some pragmatism under Bush. So far Trump has been a bull in a
china shop.”
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