Obama slams U.S. move on climate change at talk
IN MONTREAL, OBAMA CALLS FOR LEADERSHIP ON CLIMATE, STANDS AGAINST ISOLATIONISM
MONTREAL • Former U.S. president Barack Obama has decried what he calls the lack of American leadership on climate change.
In a speech to the Montreal Board of Trade on Tuesday, Obama did not mention U.S. President Donald Trump by name but clearly targeted his successor’s decision to pull the United States out of the Paris climate change agreement.
“In Paris, we came together around the most ambitious agreement in history to fight climate change,” Obama said. “An agreement that even with the temporary absence of American leadership will still give our children a fighting chance.”
The former president also seemed to take a dig at Trump when he discussed the current age of instant information.
“Where TV and Twitter can feed us a steady stream of bad news and sometimes fake news, it can seem like the international order we have created is constantly being tested and the centre may not hold,” he said.
“And in some cases, that leads people to search for certainty and control and they can call for isolationism or nationalism or they can suggest rolling back the rights of others.
“Or simply they can try to retreat and suggest we have no obligations beyond our borders, or beyond our communities, or beyond our tribe — that what’s good for me and my immediate people is all that matters, that everyone else is on their own.”
Obama said that while such instincts of retrenchment are understandable and tempting, they must be avoided.
“History also shows there is a better way,” he said. “Canada shows, the United States, Europe, Japan show it is possible for us to overcome our fears and to reach across our divides.”
About 6,000 people, including Premier Philippe Couillard, former premier Jean Charest and a slew of high-profile business executives, attended Obama’s speech in what was his first visit to Canada since he left the White House in January.
The cheapest seats went for $57, while the most expensive was $373.
People were advised to show up two hours before the speech.
Obama is only the latest to speak out against the U.S. decision to withdraw from the Paris climate accord. On Tuesday, France’s top diplomat at the United Nations said Trump’s decision was part of “the erosion of the moral and political leadership of the United States.”
“America is perceived on this on the wrong side of history,” Ambassador François Delattre told reporters. “For some, its status has shifted. Once the most reliable guarantor of the world order, the U.S. is now being considered, again by some, and at the risk of exaggerating, a threat to our planet’s equilibrium.
“Worse, the indispensable nation is perceived as risking losing that attribute if the Paris agreement is implemented without it.”
The veteran French diplomat said he was encouraged that other countries and American businesses were reaffirming their commitments to reducing carbon emissions under the voluntary agreement, and said the pact would remain “our common roadmap.”
Speaking slowly and with evident regret, Delattre said Trump’s decision was about more than the agreement at hand and presaged a retreat from American preeminence in the post-World
WE MORE THAN EVER NEED AMERICA TO ORGANIZE THIS MULTIPOLAR WORLD.
War II global order.
“On the geopolitical level, indeed, my personal take is that the American decision can be interpreted as a factor in the erosion of the moral and political leadership of the United States,” Delattre said.
“This decision could retrospectively be perceived as the birth certificate of the multipolar world,” he said. “We more than ever need America to organize this multipolar world. We, more than ever, need an America that stays committed to world affairs, because a lasting American withdrawal from world affairs could give rise to the return of all spheres of influence, whose dire consequences we are already familiar with.”
French President Emmanuel Macron has also condemned Trump’s decision and said France would welcome disheartened American climate scientists.
Trump announced last week that the United States would quit the landmark 2015 agreement, alleging that it was a bad deal for taxpayers and American business. Macron, among many other leaders, had directly lobbied Trump to remain a part of the agreement.
The U.S. is a linchpin of the pact, and the voluntary participation of the largest industrialized country was intended as a prod and an example to others.