The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US on track to meet climate targets despite Trump — UN chief

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UNITED NATIONS, United States: The United States is on track to meet the targets of the Paris climate agreement despite President Donald Trump’s plan to withdraw from the accord, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said.

Guterres said emissions-cutting plans put in motion by American businesses, regional government­s and cities meant that the goals set by the former US administra­tion which signed the deal in 2016 were within reach.

“We have seen in the cities, and we have seen in many states, a very strong commitment to the Paris agreement, to the extent that some indicators are moving even better than in the recent past,” Guterres told reporters at UN headquarte­rs in New York.

“There are expectatio­ns that, independen­tly of the position of the administra­tion, the US might be able to meet the commitment­s made in Paris as a country.”

Under the deal, the administra­tion of former president Barack Obama pledged to cut domestic greenhouse gas emissions 26 to 28 per cent below 2005 levels by 2025.

Nearly 200 countries and parties have signed the landmark agreement after intense negotiatio­ns in Paris, where all nations made voluntary carboncutt­ing pledges running to 2030.

The agreement is aimed at limiting global warming to

We have seen in the cities, and we have seen in many states, a very strong commitment to the Paris agreement, to the extent that some indicators are moving even better than in the recent past. Antonio Guterres, UN Secretary-General

within two degrees Celsius, but Guterres warned that more action was needed by 2020 to reach that goal.

Trump faced condemnati­on when he announced in June 2017 that the United States was pulling out, painting the accord as a ‘bad deal’ for the US economy.

Under the agreement, the United States can formally give notice that it plans to withdraw in 2019, three years after the accord came into force, and the withdrawal would become effective in 2020.

Describing climate change as “the most systemic threat to humankind,” Guterres said recent data on extreme weather events showed that “2017 was filled with climate chaos.”

“2018 has already brought more of the same,” he said.

“Food security, health, stability itself all hang in the balance.”

Guterres is planning to host a major summit next year to take stock of progress in implementi­ng the climate deal, but it remains unlikely that Trump would attend.

Though Guterres said the US is on track to meet Paris climate agreement targets, the Trump administra­tion still has the ability to change current regulation­s.

The New York Times reported Thursday, citing an Environmen­tal Protection Agency spokeswoma­n, that the White House was expected to push a plan to loosen standards on emissions and vehicle fuel economy standards—undercutti­ng the previous administra­tion’s bid to fight climate change.

Such a move would represent a win for automakers, potentiall­y paving the way to lower the bar for standards globally. — AFP

 ??  ?? Antonio Guterres
Antonio Guterres

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