Biden set to rejoin Paris climate accord, impose curbs on U.S. oil
industry
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[January 20, 2021]
By Valerie Volcovici and Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Incoming U.S.
president Joe Biden will announce America’s return to the international
Paris Agreement to fight climate change on Wednesday, the centerpiece of
a raft of day-one executive orders aimed at restoring U.S. leadership in
combating global warming.
The announcements will also include a sweeping order to review all of
ex-President Donald Trump's actions weakening climate change
protections, the revocation of a vital permit for the Keystone XL oil
pipeline project from Canada, and a moratorium on oil and gas leasing
activities in the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge that Trump's
administration had recently opened to development, Biden aides said.
The orders will mark the start of a major policy reversal in the world’s
second-largest greenhouse gas emitter behind China, after four years
during which Trump’s administration pilloried climate science and rolled
back environmental regulation to maximize fossil fuel development.
Biden has promised to put the United States on a track to net-zero
emissions by 2050 to match the steep and swift global cuts that
scientists say are needed to avoid the most devastating impacts of
global warming, using curbs on fossil fuels and massive investments in
clean energy.
The path won't be easy, though, with political divisions in the United
States, opposition from fossil fuel companies, and wary international
partners concerned about U.S. policy shifts obstructing the way.
"We got off track very severely for the last four years with a climate
denier in the Oval Office," said John Podesta, an adviser to former
President Barack Obama who helped craft the 2015 Paris Agreement. "We
enter the international arena with a credibility deficit."
Biden's orders will also require government agencies to consider
revising vehicle fuel efficiency standards and methane emissions curbs,
and to study the possibility of re-expanding the boundaries of
wilderness national monuments that had been reduced in size by the Trump
administration.
HARD PART AHEAD
Global counterparts and climate advocates welcomed Washington’s return
to cooperation on climate change, but expressed some skepticism about
its staying power, and its ability to overcome domestic political
turmoil to enact ambitious new regulation.
Trump withdrew the United States from the 2015 Paris deal late last
year, arguing it was too costly to the U.S. economy and would provide
little tangible benefit, and swept away scores of environmental
protections he saw as onerous to drillers, miners, and manufacturers.
"The United States continues to be the one and only country that has
withdrawn from the Paris Agreement, making it, frankly, the pariah of
this multilateral agreement," former U.N. climate chief Christiana
Figueres, told Reuters.
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Democratic U.S. presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe
Biden arrives to speak about modernizing infrastructure and his
plans for tackling climate change during a campaign event in
Wilmington, Delaware, U.S., July 14, 2020. REUTERS/Leah Millis
Biden can regain U.S. credibility by “doing the domestic homework”
of ambitious climate action at home.
Brian Deese, Biden’s incoming director of the National Economic
Council, told Reuters that the United States hopes to encourage
other big emitters to also "push their ambition, even as we have to
demonstrate our ability to come back on the stage and show
leadership."
Hua Chunying, a spokeswoman for China’s foreign ministry, said
China, the world's top carbon emitter, "looks forward" to the return
of the United States to the Paris pact.
The climate envoy from the low-lying Marshall Islands, meanwhile,
suggested the United States could help press for stronger climate
commitments around the globe.
“The world is looking to the Biden-Harris administration to generate
solutions to the climate crisis, reinvigorate commitment to the
Paris Agreement, and ensure that countries around the world can
deliver a green and resilient recovery from COVID-19," Tina Eonemto
Stege said.
Pete Betts, an associate fellow at London-based think tank Chatham
House who led climate negotiations for the European Union when the
Paris deal was struck, said the United States will need to match its
promises with financial commitments too.
The United States under Obama pledged to deliver $3 billion to the
Green Climate Fund to help vulnerable countries fight climate
change. It has delivered only $1 billion so far.
“The U.S. will need to put some money on the table, and also
encourage others to do the same,” he said.
Biden has tapped former Secretary of State John Kerry as his
international climate envoy and is expected to set up a meeting in
the coming weeks with global counterparts.
(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici; additional reporting by Yew Lun
Tian in Beijing, David Stanway in Shanghai, and Kate Abnett in
Brussels; editing by Richard Valdmanis and Lisa Shumaker)
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