Oman Daily Observer

The impact: Who will suffer the most from US climate

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PARIS: In withdrawin­g the United States from the Paris climate pact, President Donald Trump claimed that honouring its terms would cost the country billions of dollars for a miniscule change to the global warming trajectory.

Is this true- How will Washington quitting the 196-nation Paris club affect the fight against climate changeWARM­ING : The Paris Agreement’s stated goal is to limit the average global temperatur­e to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over its level prior to the Industrial Revolution, which kicked off largescale coal and oil burning to fuel human progress.

Trump proclaimed that if nations honoured their pledges for curbing planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions in full, it would produce a mere 0.2 C Celsius “reduction” in global temperatur­e by the year 2100. Not so, experts say. Scientific projection­s show that the Paris pledges place Earth on course for warming of 3 C, which is why they need to be significan­tly upgraded in the years to come.

America’s withdrawal from the climate club risks adding another 0.3 C, according to Deon Terblance of the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on’s department for atmospheri­c research.

This early estimate was based on the assumption that no American city, region or company compensate­s for the federal shortfall in emissions cuts, which is unlikely as many have challenged the wisdom of Trump’s decision and pledged to stay the clean energy course.

Countries will meet next year for the first time since the pact was signed to review the overall impact of their efforts on the 2 C target. The first loose deadline for updating emissions pledges is 2020, and every five years thereafter. MONEY: Trump claimed the Green Climate Fund (GCF) would “likely obligate the United States to commit potentiall­y tens of billions of dollars”.

The fund was set up to help developing countries and those at high risk of global warming-induced disasters to move away from fossil fuel and shore up their defences against climate impacts.

In reality, observers point out, the US under Barack Obama had committed $3 billion to the fund, now $10 billion strong, and paid one billion. Trump will withhold the other two billion.

The GCF is only one avenue of internatio­nal climate funding, a contentiou­s issue on which poor countries had sought assurances before they signed up to the Paris Agreement.

“The question of finance will be very difficult to solve,” said Laurent Fabius, who presided over the UN conference that adopted the pact. “The money will have to be found elsewhere.”

The United contribute­d about States further a quarter of the budget of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) under whose auspices the Paris Agreement was negotiated. The US contributi­on was about $4 million last year, a quarter of the total, which will now fall away.

But on Friday, the charitable foundation Bloomberg Philanthro­pies pledged to contribute $15 million to the UNFCCC secretaria­t.

“Americans are not walking away from the Paris Climate Agreement,” said Mike Bloomberg, the UN secretary-general’s special envoy for cities and climate change.

“Americans will honour and fulfil the Paris Agreement by leading from the bottom up — and there isn’t anything Washington can do to stop us.” DOMINO EFFECT: Some fear a US withdrawal may spur other recalcitra­nt carbon polluters to follow suit, or at least dampen enthusiasm for updating emissions-cutting pledges.

Scientists say that to meet the 2 C target, humanity must leave a third of all oil reserves, half of gas reserves and over 80 per cent of coal reserves in the ground.

The UN’s climate science panel recommends a 40-70-per cent emissions cut by 2050 from 2010 levels, whereas the Paris Agreement itself commits signatorie­s to peaking emissions “as soon as possible”.

“In the short term the United States’ withdrawal from the Paris Agreement will certainly have ripple effects globally,” said Bill Hare, Chief Executive of the Climate Analytics think tank.

“But rather than fatally undermine the Paris Agreement, it will likely cause other countries to reaffirm their firm commitment to the full implementa­tion of the climate deal.” This is the hope, at least. Europe, China and India have already recommitte­d to the deal, though Russia’s Vladimir Putin said on Friday he would not “judge” Trump for his decision.

 ?? — AFP ?? Protesters hold up signs during demonstrat­ions in front of the White House in Washington, objecting to US President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris Climate accord.
— AFP Protesters hold up signs during demonstrat­ions in front of the White House in Washington, objecting to US President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris Climate accord.
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