Business World

Big role seen for US at climate talks despite withdrawal from Paris deal

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OSLO/LONDON — The United States will play a big role at global talks next month on shaping the Paris agreement on climate change, to the dismay of some nations that want Washington sidelined because of President Donald Trump’s plan to withdraw from the deal.

US officials have said they will be constructi­ve at the annual 195-nation climate meeting in Bonn, Germany, from Nov. 6-17 to work on a “rule book” for the 2015 Paris plan to shift the world economy from fossil fuels this century.

But other nations are torn between welcoming or berating Washington’s envoys after Mr. Trump decided in June to pull out and instead promote the US fossil fuel industry.

Washington retains its place in the talks because the Paris pact stipulates that no country can pull out before November 2020.

“The Trump regime really needs to walk away and not hold the rest of the world hostage to the President’s ineptitude,” said Ian Fry, who represents Tuvalu, a lowlying Pacific island nation at risk of rising sea levels and storm surges.

He told Reuters that Mr. Trump’s pro- coal policies, and doubts that climate change is caused by man-made greenhouse gas emissions, could undermine urgency at the meeting of senior officials and environmen­t ministers.

The White House did not respond to requests for comment and the State Department has not set up a briefing ahead of the meeting, as it traditiona­lly has.

This year is on track to be the second warmest since records began in the 19th century, behind 2016. Scientists say rising temperatur­es will stoke ever more powerful hurricanes, floods and wildfires.

But US delegates at preparator­y meetings said they will play a positive role in Bonn, said Nazhat Shameem Khan, chief negotiator of Fiji which will preside at the meeting.

The US approach “send positive signals… that this will not be a destructiv­e COP,” she said, using the shorthand for Conference of the Parties. It is not yet clear if any US political leaders will attend.

SYRIA, NICARAGUA

Many US allies, including France, Canada and Britain, hope to coax Trump to end up staying in the pact which is backed by all nations except Syria.

Nicaragua, which had judged the deal too weak, ratified it this month.

In a sign that most nations are willing to permit a strong US role, an internal United Nations document shows that a US official, Andrew Rakestraw, will co-lead a section of the talks with a Chinese counterpar­t on ensuring transparen­t rules for the Paris pact.

The US delegation will be led by Thomas Shannon, a career diplomat who gave a speech in 2015 calling climate change “one of the world’s greatest challenges.” —

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