Trump administration begins Paris climate pact exit
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[November 05, 2019]
By Valerie Volcovici
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Trump
administration said on Monday it filed paperwork to withdraw the United
States from the Paris Agreement, the first formal step in a one-year
process to exit the global pact to fight climate change.
The move is part of a broader strategy by President Donald Trump to
reduce red tape on American industry, but comes at a time scientists and
many world governments urge rapid action to avoid the worst impacts of
global warming.
Once it exits, the United States - the top historic greenhouse gas
emitter and leading oil and gas producer - will become the only country
outside the accord.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo confirmed the step on Monday and
pointed out that the United States had trimmed emissions in recent years
even as it had grown its energy production.
"The U.S. is proud of our record as a world leader in reducing all
emissions, fostering resilience, growing our economy, and ensuring
energy for our citizens," he said.
The European Union expressed disappointment.
"The withdrawal of the United States from the Paris Agreement means that
the rest of us must further increase our cooperation," Krista Mikkonen,
minister of environment for current European Council president Finland
said in a statement on Tuesday.
"We will continue to work with US states, cities and civil society in
support of climate action."
An official from the French presidential office accompanying President
Emmanuel Macron on a state visit to China, said: "We regret this and
this only makes the Franco-Chinese partnership on the climate and
biodiversity more necessary."
Macron and Chinese President Xi Jinping will sign a pact on Wednesday
that includes a paragraph on the "irreversibility of the Paris
Agreement," the official said.
The State Department's letter to United Nations Secretary-General
Antonio Guterres starts the clock on a process that will be complete one
day after the 2020 U.S. presidential election.
All the top Democratic presidential contenders seeking to unseat Trump
have promised to re-engage in the Paris Agreement if they win. But the
withdrawal could leave a lasting mark, said Andrew Light, a senior
fellow at the World Resources Institute and former adviser to the U.S.
climate envoy under Democratic President Barack Obama.
"While it serves the political needs of the Trump administration, we
will lose a lot of traction with respect to U.S. influence globally,” he
said.
The Obama administration had signed the United States onto the 2015
pact, promising a 26-28% cut in U.S. greenhouse gas emissions by 2025
from 2005 levels.
Trump campaigned on a promise to rescind that pledge, saying it would
hurt the U.S. economy while leaving other big polluters like China to
increase emissions. He was bound by U.N. rules to wait until Nov. 4,
2019, to file exit papers.
Trump has already moved, however, to unwind a slew of Obama-era rules
limiting emissions - including from the electricity industry,
automobiles and the oil and gas drilling sector. A report this year by
state attorneys general said those rollbacks could amount to a boost in
U.S. carbon emissions of more than 200 million tonnes a year by 2025.
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President Donald Trump speaks to the media on the South Lawn
of the White House in Washington, U.S., before his departure
to New York, November 2, 2019. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas/File
Photo
Teresa Ribera, Spain's environment minister, said on Twitter that
the formal withdrawal - although expected - dealt a blow to the
Paris deal. Spain will host the next round of climate negotiations
in place of Chile in early December.
"I deeply regret this decision, which, no matter how it was
announced, is no less worrying," she wrote.
STATE, LOCAL ACTION
Environmental groups also slammed the move.
"The next president will need to rejoin the accord immediately and
commit to the rapid, wholesale clean-energy transformation the
climate emergency demands,” said Jean Su, energy director with the
Center for Biological Diversity.
A report by the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said
last year the world had little over a decade to rapidly reduce
emissions from fossil fuels use to keep global temperatures from
rising more than 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees F).
Beyond that warming threshold, the planet becomes more likely to see
dramatic cascading effects of climate change, from sea-level rise to
more frequent intense storms, droughts, floods and heat waves,
according to the report.
In the absence of U.S. federal leadership on climate change, several
Democratic states and municipal governments have sought to apply
their own regulations curbing emissions and promoting renewable
energy sources such as solar and wind.
Alden Meyer, director of policy at the Union of Concerned
Scientists, said states, cities and businesses representing more
than half of the U.S. gross domestic product and population remained
committed to the Paris Agreement's goals.
"Unlike the president, these leaders understand that reducing
emissions creates jobs and protects local communities, while it is
inaction on climate that poses the real threat to prosperity,” he
said.
Until its formal exit, the United States will continue to
participate in negotiations over technical aspects of the agreement,
represented by career State Department officials.
The United States and China, the world’s two largest carbon
emitters, have recently been leading negotiations of the Paris "rule
book" that outlines transparency and reporting rules.
(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici; Additional reporting by Michelle
Nichols at the United Nations, Humeyra Pamuk in Washington and Jonas
Ekblom in Brussels; Editing by David Gregorio and Peter Cooney)
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