Arab Times

US still plans to withdraw

Time ticking as nations meet on Paris deal

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MONTREAL, Sept 17, (Agencies): The White House pushed back Saturday at a European suggestion it was softening its stance on the Paris climate accord, insisting Washington will withdraw from the agreement unless it can re-enter on more favorable terms.

The remark came as environmen­t ministers from some 30 countries gathered in Montreal seeking headway on the Paris climate accord, which President Donald Trump had pulled out of in June.

At the summit, which was attended by a US observer, the US “stated that they will not renegotiat­e the Paris Accord, but they (will) try to review the terms on which they could be engaged under this agreement,” the European Union’s top climate official Miguel Arias Canete said.

Canete said there would be a meeting on the sidelines of next week’s UN General Assembly with American representa­tives “to assess what is the real US position,” noting “it’s a message which is quite different to the one we heard from President Trump in the past.”

The US observer was not immediatel­y available for comment and the White House insisted the United States would withdraw from the Paris climate accord without more favorable terms.

“There has been no change in the United States’ position on the Paris agreement,” White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in an email.

“As the president has made abundantly clear, the United States is withdrawin­g unless we can re-enter on terms that are more favorable to our country,” she said.

Called by Canada, China and the European Union, the summit took place 30 years to the day after the signing of the Montreal Protocol on protecting the ozone layer — which Canada’s environmen­t minister

Xi Jinping.

(AP)

Nine given stiff sentences:

A Tanzanian court has sentenced nine people to at least 25 years in prison for illegal possession of ivory, as part of efforts to discourage poaching in one of the worst-hit countries.

According to court documents seen by hailed as a multilater­al “success story” by government­s, NGOs and ordinary citizens jointly tackling a major global threat.

We “committed to full implementa­tion of the Paris Accord. Everyone agreed that the environmen­t and the economy go together, they are linked. You cannot grow the economy without taking care of the environmen­t,” Catherine McKenna said at the end of the summit, attended by more than half the G20 members as well as some of the nations most vulnerable to climate change — from the low-lying Marshall Islands and Maldives to impoverish­ed Mali and Ethiopia.

“Changes are real, extreme weather events are more frequent, more powerful and more distressfu­l,” she told the gathering, pointing at the devastatio­n wrought by mega-storms such as Harvey and Irma which many climate scientists believe are boosted by global warming.

Limiting

Nearly 200 countries agreed in Paris in December 2015 to curb carbon dioxide emissions with the aim of limiting the rise in average global temperatur­es to 1.5 degrees Celsius by 2050, compared to preindustr­ial levels.

When Trump decided in June to withdraw, Canada, China and the European Union immediatel­y reaffirmed their respective commitment­s to the pact, which the Group of 20 declared “irreversib­le” the following month.

Time is ticking, Canete told AFP, as ministers work to narrow their difference­s and better understand how to implement the ambitious accord — with less than two months to go until the next UN Conference on Climate Change (COP23), in Bonn in November.

“We need a rule book to be able to monitor and verify and compare emissions of all the parties and see how far

AFP Saturday, the accused, including two police officers, had been “found in possession of 70 elephant tusks”.

The two policemen were sentenced on Friday to 35 years in prison, and the six others to 25 years each.

In a separate case in the north of the country a man was on Friday sentenced to 20 years in prison for possession of eight we are towards the targets,” Canete said, with a goal of having those rules in place in time for the COP24 meeting in Katowice, Poland in late 2018.

Key player China — the world’s largest car market — brings to the table a potentiall­y major advance in transporta­tion after announcing its intention to ban gasoline and dieselfuel­ed cars, following decisions by France and Britain to outlaw their sale from 2040.

The European Union — which is targeting a 40 percent cut to its emissions by 2030 — will also shortly put forward a proposal to member states on slashing carbon emissions in the transporta­tion sector, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said this week.

And Canada — as the world’s sixthlarge­st oil producer — insists it is “committed to its internatio­nal climate obligation­s,” which it hopes to reach by massively investing in “clean energy” technologi­es.

China’s special representa­tive to the talks, Xie Zhenhua, said Beijing considers the Montreal Protocol to be a “very effective and efficient” example of multilater­al action on the environmen­t — largely because it rested on a broad consensus.

“We should take actions now,” Xie said, “to ensure that we can realize the goals that we have set.”

“The key issue is how we should combine climate actions with economic growth, the protection of people and job creation,” he added.

“If we can combine all these matters we could make Paris agreement a great success.”

The Wall Street Journal reported that Trump administra­tion officials said the United States would not pull out of the agreement and had offered to re-engage in the deal, citing the European Commission’s Miguel Arias Canete.

tusks, a court official told AFP.

Tanzania has been one of the worst hit by elephant poaching, losing over 66,000 elephants in the last decade.

In August, leading South African conservati­onist Wayne Lotter, who co-founded the PAMS foundation that finances the NTSCIU, was shot dead in Dar es Salaam in an incident some believe was linked to his work. (AFP)

Koala survives 10-mile trip:

For a stowaway who made a 16-km (10-mile) journey squeezed in a wheel arch, a koala was lucky to escape with just scratches.

The driver of the four-wheel vehicle was unaware of the extra passenger until they arrived at their destinatio­n in the outskirts of Adelaide, Australia, and he heard some unusual cries.

After seeing the koala in the wheel arch, he immediatel­y called animal rescuers, who removed the wheel and eventually extricated the frightened but very lucky animal.

“You think you’ve seen it all. No, I’ve never seen anything like that and it’s absolutely incredible,” said Fauna Rescue worker, Jane Brister.

The koala suffered superficia­l injuries and was covered in grease from under the car. “She was crying a little bit, she was a little bit shaken, she was certainly in shock but I rushed her straight to the vet,” Brister said. (AP)

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