The Citizen (Gauteng)

US still wants clean energy

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– US Energy Secretary Rick Perry called for Sino-US cooperatio­n on clean energy during a visit to Beijing yesterday, a week after President Donald Trump’s much-criticised withdrawal from the Paris climate pact.

Trump’s decision has jolted the internatio­nal community and could put China, the world’s top carbon emitter, in a position to fill the leadership void on curbing global warming.

But Perry said the United States was still eager to work with China on developing clean energy technology, such as liquefied natural gas, clean coal and nuclear power.

“We have extraordin­ary opportunit­ies to be partners to work on clean energy issues,” Perry said on the sidelines of a ministeria­l-level clean energy meeting in Beijing.

The relatively low-level reception was a contrast to the red carpet Beijing rolled out for California governor Jerry Brown earlier this week.

Brown spent almost an hour with President Xi Jinping and they signed a memorandum of understand­ing on developing clean energy.

Brown has vowed to step into the vacuum left by Trump’s exit from the Paris accord and has mounted a vigorous PR campaign on behalf of his state’s leadership on environmen­tal issues.

Beijing has said it will stick with the agreement despite the US withdrawal and is seeking to reach out to American states that share its determinat­ion.

California, which has the world’s sixth-largest economy, is one of a handful of US states that have pledged to continue fighting climate change.

The state – which has some of the worst air pollution in the country – has dramatical­ly slashed its harmful emissions in the last decade.

It has pledged to cut greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2020, and to 40% below 1990 levels by 2030.

Before setting off for China, Brown pledged California would resist the decision to abandon the Paris deal, describing the move as “misguided and insane”. –

Beijing

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