China accuses U.S. of deflecting blame as diplomatic row shifts to
climate
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[October 28, 2020]
By Muyu Xu and David Stanway
BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) - A senior
Chinese official accused the United States on Wednesday of deflecting
blame and breaking its word when it comes to fighting climate change, as
the simmering diplomatic row between the world's two biggest economies
shifts to the environment.
The U.S. State Department said last month that China had showed "willful
disregard" for air, land and water quality, and was putting global
health at risk, with its climate-warming greenhouse gases the highest in
the world and still rising.
But Washington cannot make other countries take responsibility for its
own environmental failures, said Li Gao, head of the climate change
department at China's Ministry of Ecology and Environment, during a news
briefing.
"The United States is the country with the most accumulated greenhouse
gases, and at the start of next month will formally withdraw from the
Paris Agreement," he said.
The row is part of a wider dispute between the two sides, with Beijing
repeatedly accusing Washington of "unilateralism", bullying and failing
to meet its global obligations while emphasising its own multilateralist
credentials.
The United States began the three-year process to pull out of the Paris
accord in 2017, with President Donald Trump saying the deal favoured
China's firms and undermined the U.S. economy.
But China's foreign ministry said last week that the United States was a
"consensus-breaker" and "troublemaker" and had failed to honour its
commitments to the international community.
CLEAR ADVANTAGES
After Trump accused Beijing of "rampant pollution" during a United
Nations General Assembly meeting in late September, his Chinese
counterpart Xi Jinping vowed to steer his country towards "carbon
neutrality" by 2060 and play a bigger role in combating climate change.
Experts have said that the country's carbon neutral pledge is part of an
effort to build its reputation as a responsible global leader.
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Chinese and U.S. flags flutter in Shanghai, China June 3, 2020.
REUTERS/Aly Song
"Xi Jinping's announcement ... is a high level political decision.
It is a very significant geopolitical consideration," said Li Shuo,
climate advisor with environmental group Greenpeace.
China's diplomatic standing has been damaged by claims that its
authoritarian political system led to a cover-up of the COVID-19
outbreak, allowing it to spread worldwide.
But Xie Zhenhua, special advisor to China's environment ministry,
said the system has "clear advantages" over its rivals in the area
of climate change.
"Some countries find it difficult to implement," said Xie, who
headed China's climate negotiating team until 2018. "Why? Because
they are electoral governments and can plan for only four or five
years and after that, don't know whether they will still be in
power."
"The United States for example: Obama committed to many targets
which aren't being done once Trump came into power."
However, critics of China's "authoritarian environmentalism" say it
could still struggle to fulfill long-term climate goals.
"In the absence of rule of law, authoritarian rulers have the final
say, but their policy agenda continues to shift, which makes it
difficult to sustain a coherent agenda on climate change," said
Yanzhong Huang, author of Toxic Politics, which looks at China's
environmental record.
(Reporting by Muyu Xu and David Stanway; Editing by Michael Perry)
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