At climate talks, it’s more America alone
Washington, Oct. 30: Facing 195 other countries who have chosen a different path, the task of US negotiators at the upcoming climate talks in Bonn is unenviable.
President Donald Trump has vowed to exit the Paris Climate accord, just not yet, leaving US policy in limbo for the next three years until Washington can officially leave.
So, it falls to Thomas Shannon, a respected career diplomat to this week lead a delegation into talks aimed at implementing an agreement the US is set to abandon.
“It is a strange situation, I don't think I have seen anything like it in my almost 30 years of following this process,” said Alden Meyer of the Union of Concerned Scientists, a Washington-based nonprofit working on environmental issues.
The Trump administration says it will still turn up, hoping to protect America’s interests and put “America first.” Rather ambitiously, Washington wants to handcuff its biggest geopolitical rivals to their commitments.
A White House official said it wants “to ensure the rules are transparent and fair, and apply to countries like China and other economic competitors to the United States.”
But Mr Shannon and his team might find themselves on shaky ground.
Ben Rhodes, a former aide to US President Barack Obama, believes Washington has abandoned any leverage it once had.
“The rest of the world has no incentive to make concessions to the US since we are now entirely isolated,” he said.
“My expectation is that the rest of the world will simply continue within the Paris framework and wait and see what happens in the US in 2020” he added. — AFP