Start GRASP/China How China would soften impact if Trump abandons Paris climate accord

How China would soften impact if Trump abandons Paris climate accord

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China’s top-down environmental initiatives, energy market forces and sub-national mandates in the US would mitigate the impact of President Donald Trump’s possible withdraw from a global climate pact, according to energy and climate experts….
China’s top-down environmental initiatives, energy market forces and sub-national mandates in the US would mitigate the impact of President Donald Trump’s possible withdraw from a global climate pact, according to energy and climate experts. Media outlets citing unnamed White House sources reported that Trump will likely fulfil his 2016 presidential campaign promise to withdraw from the United Nations’ Paris Agreement, signed by Barack Obama earlier last year. Trump said on Twitter on Wednesday he would announce a decision on the pact soon. The accord commits the US to cutting carbon dioxide and other fossil fuel-related emissions by about 27 per cent by 2025, using 2005 emission levels as a baseline. More than 140 other countries have signed the agreement, cobbled together as part of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, committing themselves to varying reduction targets. As the world’s two largest greenhouse gas emitters, China and the US are the two most important signatories. “There’s very credible evidence to suggest that” China will hit its commitment to peak the country’s overall greenhouse gas emissions earlier than the planned target of 2030, Andrew Light, a former US State Department climate negotiator, said in an interview with the . “It would send a signal of hope to the rest of the world if the Chinese re-committed themselves to a peak earlier, and all eyes are on China, especially when [President Xi Jinping] has said they will step into the leadership gap on this issue.” China doesn’ t face the same kind of opposition to climate-change action that has pushed Republican presidents in the US – particularly from religious groups and some energy producers – to stymie efforts to lower carbon dioxide and other emissions related to the burning of fossil fuels, said James Miller, director of the cultural studies programme at Queen’s university in Canada.

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