Sunday Star-Times

US faces long process to pull out of climate pact

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The Trump administra­tion has officially told the United Nations that the United States intends to pull out of the 2015 Paris climate pact.

But the State Department’s announceme­nt yesterday doesn’t formally start the process of the US getting out of the voluntary agreement. That’s still to come.

Still, the department described its communicat­ion as a ‘‘strong message’’ to the world, following President Donald Trump’s decision in June to quit the accord.

Nigel Purvis, who directed US climate diplomacy during the Bill Clinton and George W Bush administra­tions, said countries could not withdraw from new internatio­nal agreements, including the Paris climate pact, until three years after they came into effect. The Paris agreement went into effect last November. Then the process takes a year.

The State Department cited the same timeline, saying it could officially start withdrawin­g as soon as November 2019. That means the earliest the US can be out of the climate agreement is November 4, 2020 – the day after the next presidenti­al election.

The department said the US would continue to participat­e in internatio­nal meetings and negotiatio­ns on current and future climate change deals. The next meeting is in Bonn, Germany in November.

Trump was ‘‘open to reengaging in the Paris Agreement if the United States can identify terms that are more favourable to it, its business, its workers, its people and its taxpayers’’, the department said.

Under the agreement, countries set their own national plans for cutting climate emissions. This means Trump can come up with different targets for the US than those set by his predecesso­r Barack Obama. But he can’t unilateral­ly change the text of the Paris deal.

UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric confirmed that SecretaryG­eneral Antonio Guterres had received ‘‘a communicat­ion’’ from US Ambassador Nikki Haley ‘‘expressing the intention of the United States to exercise its right to withdraw from the Paris Agreement, as soon as it is eligible to do so under the Agreement, unless it identifies suitable terms for reengageme­nt’’.

Dujarric reiterated Guterres’ June 1 statement calling the US decision to withdraw ‘‘a major disappoint­ment for global efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and promote global security’’.

‘‘It is crucial that the United States remains a leader on climate and sustainabl­e developmen­t,’’ Dujarric said. ‘‘Climate change is impacting now. [Guterres] looks forward to engaging with the American government and all other actors in the United States and around the world to build the sustainabl­e future for our children and future generation­s.’’

Under Obama, the US agreed to reduce polluting emissions by more than a quarter from 2005 levels by the year 2025. There is no climate court. All that is required in the agreement is a plan and reporting on progress toward reaching self-set goals.

No matter what the US does, the Paris agreement remains in effect because enough other countries ratified it.

The Paris agreement aims to prevent Earth from heating up by 2 degrees C since the start of the industrial age.

The world has already warmed about 1.1C since the Industrial Revolution. The overwhelmi­ng majority of scientists say the burning of coal, oil and gas is causing the planet’s climate to change because of heat-trapping gases.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Announcing his decision that the US would withdraw from the Paris climate accord, Donald Trump claimed that the pact would achieve only "tiny" temperatur­e reductions.
REUTERS Announcing his decision that the US would withdraw from the Paris climate accord, Donald Trump claimed that the pact would achieve only "tiny" temperatur­e reductions.

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