Manawatu Standard

Paris flashpoint of climate collision

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To drop out of the Paris accord would take four years, but Trump’s government could simply stop carrying out any actions to implement for the four or eight years it is in power.

Climate change is likely to be the first issue where U.S. domestic and foreign policy, under the new administra­tion of President-elect Donald Trump, will collide with the internatio­nal community.

The policies of President Barack Obama had America among the countries leading the way on this issue, culminatin­g in the U.N Framework Convention on Climate Change accord struck in Paris last year.

Obama’s administra­tion’s actions with respect to environmen­tal issues were a mixed bag, but basically consistent with U.S. intentions to proceed with efforts to curb America’s carbon emissions to meet future targets.

The positions that Trump took during the campaign, presumably to be implemente­d once he takes office in January, appear to go in the opposite direction.

Not only did he say he would withdraw America from the pact, he also made promises to the electorate, including to bring coal and steel back, that would put America in a position of nonobserva­nce of its previous commitment­s, and also have it doing serious damage to the global campaign against climate change in general.

The just completed conference on implementa­tion of the Paris agreement in Marrakesh, Morocco, put the world’s dilemma on the subject under the spotlight.

The whole world is, of course, aware of America’s previous commitment­s. It is also, of course, fully aware of Trump’s stated positions relevant to the subject.

The representa­tives of the current U.S. administra­tion at the conference were in the position of being unable to commit the country they represente­d to anything.

One interestin­g aspect is that China, the world’s No. 1 polluter America is second - showed itself at Marrakesh to stand ready to pick up the banner of world leadership on this important issue if the United States, under Trump, wants to walk off the field of play.

Another complicati­ng factor is that state officials in California and other West Coast states have indicated that they intend to proceed with participat­ing in the world effort to take steps to stop or roll back global warming, no matter what position a Trump administra­tion in Washington may take.

To drop out of the Paris accord would take four years, but Trump’s government could simply stop carrying out any actions to implement for the four or eight years it is in power.

Part of the confusion over the American position comes from elements in the United States who believe that climate change is inevitable, or cyclical, as opposed to man-made and subject to actions based on that hypothesis.

It is also the case that the world - in the strictest sense of the term is probably capable of withstandi­ng a U.S. policy of dogpaddlin­g on climate change for four or eight years, given the time frame of the phenomenon.

Whatever U.S. policy under Trump turns out to be, it will be a bone of contention for the United States and a Europe led by German Chancellor Angela Merkel and an Asia led by Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Pittsburgh Post-gazette

 ??  ?? US President-elect Donald Trump
US President-elect Donald Trump

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