Belfast Telegraph

US must use influence over climate change

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IN his address to the United Nations General Assembly, US President Donald Trump made no mention of climate change, while emphasisin­g individual liberty and national sovereignt­y.

However, the principle of equal liberty calls on us to maximize our own freedom without interferin­g with the freedom of others.

Human-induced climate change is causing sea level rise by warming oceans and melting land ice.

Consider that 20 million Bangladesh­is are farming on land that is within a metre of high tide.

Their freedoms should be meaningful as well.

And how might President Trump’s view of climate change be different if he was the head of a small island nation, whose survival is threatened by climate change, even though it has contribute­d very little to global carbon dioxide emissions?

What about the sovereignt­y of Fiji and the Marshall Islands?

Although liberty is a fundamenta­l right, the flip side of every right is a responsibi­lity.

Indian scientist Vandana Shiva points out that the “separation of rights and responsibi­lities is the beginning of any destructiv­e enterprise”.

America has a unique ability to lead and influence our world, and the United States should embrace that role with respect to climate action.

TERRY HANSEN By email

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