Cape Breton Post

Protests, new climate pledges after Trump’s Paris pullout

-

Environmen­tal campaigner­s protested Friday against President Donald Trump’s decision to pull the United States out of the Paris climate accord, while nations around the world pledged to double down on their efforts to curb global warming in response to the U.S. move.

In Berlin, Greenpeace activists projected Trump’s silhouette onto the side of the U.S. embassy along with the words “#TotalLoser, so sad!”

Hours later German Chancellor Angela Merkel summoned reporters for an impromptu statement in which she called Trump’s decision “extremely regrettabl­e, and that’s putting it very mildly.”

But Merkel, whose country hosts this year’s internatio­nal climate summit, said it was now time to look ahead.

“This decision can’t and won’t stop all those of us who feel obliged to protect the planet,” she said. “On the contrary. We in Germany, Europe and the world will combine our forces more resolutely than ever to address and successful­ly tackle challenges for humanity such as climate change.”

In Brussels, European Council President Donald Tusk, standing alongside Chinese Premier Li Keqiang, said that the EU and China “are convinced that yesterday’s decision by the United States to leave the Paris agreement is a big mistake.”

Referring to “the latest unfortunat­e decisions of the new administra­tion,” Tusk said that the EU and China had “demonstrat­ed solidarity with future generation­s and responsibi­lity

for the whole planet” by reaffirmin­g their climate change commitment.

Anticipati­ng a possible U.S. pullout, officials from China and the European Union — two of the world’s major polluters — have prepared a declaratio­n reaffirmin­g their commitment to the 2015 Paris Agreement, which is widely considered a landmark deal for bringing together almost all countries under a common goal.

Trump said the United States would be willing to rejoin the accord if it could obtain more favourable terms, but the leaders of France, Germany and Italy said in a joint statement Thursday that the agreement cannot be renegotiat­ed, “since it is a vital instrument for our planet, societies and economics.”

Germany’s environmen­t minister, Barbara Hendricks, told reporters in Berlin that other countries will fill the leadership vacuum but none will be expected to make up the shortfall in emissions reductions caused by Washington’s exit.

Hendricks said the absence of $500 million contributi­ons from the United States to the Green Climate Fund will be felt from 2018, but suggested the gap could be filled with “other financing mechanisms, for example through the World Bank.”

The Green Fund is designed to help poor countries adapt to climate change and bypass some of the heavily polluting technologi­es formerly used by rich countries.

Poor countries are predicted to be among the hardest hit by global warming, with some foreseeing tens of millions of “climate refugees” in coming decades.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Greenpeace protesters stand in silence with banners outside the U.S. embassy in Madrid, Spain, Friday. The protesters gathered at the gates of the United States embassy in the Spanish capital to protest President Donald Trump’s decision to pull the...
AP PHOTO Greenpeace protesters stand in silence with banners outside the U.S. embassy in Madrid, Spain, Friday. The protesters gathered at the gates of the United States embassy in the Spanish capital to protest President Donald Trump’s decision to pull the...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada