Business Standard

US joins ‘constructi­ve’ G-20 climate meeting

- BRIAN PARKIN 25 March

Officials representi­ng the world’s largest economies, including the US, put global climate talks back on track in Berlin Friday, after failing last week to agree on language supporting the Paris accord, the German government said.

G-20 climate and energy ministers held a “constructi­ve” meeting over a plan to address global warming, setting the stage for further negotiatio­ns leading up to the July summit in Hamburg where US President Donald Trump, China’s President Xi Jinping and other leaders will gather, the German Environmen­t Ministry said in a statement to Bloomberg.

The climate meeting comes a week after the US, China, India and Saudi Arabia successful­ly pushed to have a reference to global warming dropped from a statement issued by G-20 finance ministers and central bankers. German officials were frustrated by the move and said they would continue using their role as host of this year’s G-20 meetings to support efforts to fight global warming.

“It’s an important concern to push implementa­tion of the Paris accord,” the German Environmen­t Ministry said in its statement. The climate treaty offers “manifold chances to modernise economies, boost competitiv­eness and create jobs and growth.”

The climate plan presented by Germany emphasises economic growth opportunit­ies from clean energy, underscori­ng Chancellor Angela Merkel’s strategy to sell the idea to Trump and preserve the global effort to rein in greenhouse gases.

There’s scant evidence the strategy will pay off. Trump has derided climate change as a hoax and during his campaign threatened to pull the US out of the Paris accord. Since taking office, he’s called for relaxing fuel-economy standards for cars and trucks and proposed sweeping cuts to climate change research.

The moves have sparked concern among environmen­talists around the globe. On Thursday, United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres acknowledg­ed countries may be retreating on climate change efforts, but didn’t single out the US. The US was represente­d in talks Friday by State Department official Griffin Thompson. A State Department spokesman declined to comment on the meeting. Germany was represente­d by Economy and Energy Ministry division head Thorsten Herdan.

Germany will try to rally support for its climate plan during three meetings in May, with the aim of gaining enough backing to be adopted by G-20 leaders including Trump at the Hamburg summit on July 7 and July 8.

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