U.S., Chinese diplomats signal tricky road ahead for climate diplomacy
Send a link to a friend
[September 24, 2020]
By Valerie Volcovici and David Stanway
WASHINGTON/SHANGHAI (Reuters) - After
several years of dismissing global action to fight climate change, U.S.
leadership was formally challenged this week by China announcing bold
new climate pledges.
Former Vice President Joe Biden has pledged to reinvigorate U.S. climate
leadership if he wins the Nov. 3 election against incumbent President
Donald Trump.
Re-establishing that leadership role, however, may not be so easy,
according to U.S. and Chinese diplomats involved in past climate
negotiations.
The 2015 Paris Agreement hinged on a pact between China and the United
States, the world’s two biggest emitters, to cooperate on climate
action. Now, the United States under Trump is poised to exit the treaty
on Nov. 4, the day after the election.
And the once-careful negotiations between Washington and Beijing have
unraveled to what experts say is the worst level in years. Under Trump,
the United States has launched a trade war against China and blamed
Beijing for the COVID-19 pandemic, while China has cracked down on
pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, imprisoned Uighurs in Xinjiang and
escalated tensions in the South China Sea.
This week, the situation got even trickier as China’s President Xi
Jinping announced plans to be carbon neutral by 2060 and urged the world
to step up to the challenge.
Making global climate progress without reviving the U.S.-China
relationship would be impossible, according to former U.S. climate envoy
Todd Stern and other key figures behind the Paris agreement.
China produces 29% of global emissions - more than the EU and United
States combined. Taken together, the three regions account for just over
half of global carbon dioxide emissions.
Biden’s team would need to balance the forces of competition and
cooperation with China, or else renewed climate cooperation won’t get
off the ground, Stern said.
"We will have to learn to manage a relationship marked by both
competition and collaboration, working with allies to stand up against
unacceptable Chinese behavior where necessary, while seeking to
collaborate where we can and must," he wrote in an essay for the
Brookings Institution this month.
TABLES TURNED
In his speech at the U.N. General Assembly on Tuesday, Xi said China's
CO2 emissions would peak before 2030. His pledge for China to achieve
carbon neutrality before 2060 also marked the country's first commitment
to a long-term target.
The announcement amounted to a “framing of competition between the U.S.
and China,” said Andrew Light, who served on the U.S. strategy team in
U.N. climate negotiations under Obama.
In effect, Xi set the agenda on future climate negotiations, getting
ahead of pressure from a potential Biden presidency to rein its coal use
and plans to build coal plants worldwide, Light said.
Biden already has pledged that the United States will produce
carbon-free electricity by 2035 and achieve net zero emissions across
the economy by 2050. But his plans will require either executive action
that can be challenged in court or legislation that would need to pass
through Congress.
Biden would also find the EU much more assertive on climate today,
compared with during the Obama era, as the bloc has placed climate
action at the center of its policy framework, pledging to impose a
carbon border tax and to invest in clean technologies.
If Trump wins the 2020 presidential election, China would take
"advantage of the fact that the U.S. has been absent on this front" and
"enhance its global positioning" around climate change, said Peter
Kiernan, lead energy analyst at The Economist Intelligence Unit.
TAKING POSITION
Officially, China insists its position on climate negotiations will
remain the same, regardless of who wins the election in the United
States, and claims that re-engagement with the United States is not
necessarily a priority.
[to top of second column]
|
Flags of the United States and China are placed for a meeting
between the U.S. secretary of agriculture and China's minister of
agriculture at the Ministry of Agriculture in Beijing, China June
30, 2017. REUTERS/Jason Lee
China's top climate official, Li Gao, said in a Sept. 7 speech that
while China would "proactively" and "unswervingly" fulfill its
national commitments on climate change, global political
complications were making things harder.
"Under an accumulation of factors such as unilateralism,
protectionism and the spread of the novel coronavirus, the handling
of global climate change is facing more difficulties," he said.
The Biden campaign has said the United States under his leadership
would seek to work with China again on climate change, but would
push Beijing to curb exports of coal technology and reducing the
carbon footprint of its Belt and Road Initiative – a massive
infrastructure project that would stretch from East Asia to Europe.
China has under construction hundreds of new coal plants and could
build even more in the next five years.
The country is also expected to rely on energy-intensive
infrastructure projects to try to accelerate its post-COVID-19
economic recovery.
Biden adviser John Kerry, former secretary of state and key player
behind the Paris agreement, said that China’s buildout of coal
domestically and abroad would negate any past progress on climate
change.
“That’s going to kill the efforts to deal with climate,” Kerry said
earlier this month in a live-streamed discussion. This is why the
United States needs to rebuild its climate partnership with China
regardless of other disagreements, he argued.
“We are going to have to reach out, build up, but also be absolutely
firm about the things that we disagree with.”
Cementing the U.S.-China bilateral agreement in 2014 took over four
years of work and included the personal outreach of Stern, Kerry and
Obama chief of staff John Podesta with their Chinese counterparts.
That same level of outreach would need to happen quickly now,
including “confidence building measures” to help ease the “strong
forces of nationalism in both countries,” said David Sandalow,
former under Secretary of Energy under Obama and China expert at
Columbia’s Global Energy Policy.
Those measures could include reopening diplomacy in areas such as
green finance, or partnerships on carbon capture technology, he
said.
That effort, even if difficult, is still possible if not essential,
said Paul Bodnar, a State Department climate negotiator under Obama.
In the first year of Obama’s administration, the U.S.-China
relationship “wasn’t particularly rosy,” Bodnar noted. Other nations
were also wary of U.S. climate leadership, after President George W.
Bush withdrew the U.S. from an earlier global climate pact, the
Kyoto Protocol.
“It took us three years to dig ourselves out of the hole of distrust
we found ourselves in," Bodnar said.
Still, he said, regardless of what else is going on in the
U.S.-China relationship, they will have to find a way to work
together.
"The fate of the planet depends on it. There is no other option," he
said.
(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici and David Stanway; Additional
reporting by David Stanway in Shanghai and Kate Abnett in Brussels;
Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |