Albuquerque Journal

Energy ministers gather to talk climate change

Energy Sec. Perry offers differing opinion on climate spending

- BY MATTHEW BROWN

BEIJING — Energy ministers from around the world gathered in Beijing this week to report increased spending to help counter climate change. Yet one prominent voice, that of U.S. Energy Secretary Rick Perry, delivered a starkly countervai­ling message as the Trump administra­tion seeks to roll back spending on clean energy and promote fossil fuels.

India, France, Norway, Canada, Australia, Japan and others said during a private meeting of ministers earlier this week that they were on track to double government research budgets.

When Perry’s turn came, he said deep cuts to research in Trump’s proposed budget ref lected an increased understand­ing that developing new technologi­es into commercial projects should be left to private companies. The proposal must first pass through Congress.

“If you’re going to have to prioritize where your dollars are going, early stage is where we’re going to spend it,” Perry said Friday when asked about his earlier comments. “Once (a new technology) has been proven up, we need to get out of the business.”

The approach he outlined marks a sharp departure from the past practice of ushering new technologi­es through to commercial deployment. It also illustrate­s a new reality emerging across the global energy landscape, where U.S. innovation­s long dominated.

That’s opened the way for other large developing nations, especially China, to seize the mantle of leadership in tackling climate change.

“For us it’s not a political issue but a moral and spiritual issue,” Harsh Vardhan, India’s minister of science and technology, told The Associated Press. “We are working for the future of our children.”

Trump last week cast his decision to withdraw from the Paris climate accord in terms of economic self-interest.

He warned American jobs would be transferre­d overseas if the U.S. remained in the agreement.

Renewable energy is widely seen as a major driver of future global growth and Trump was accused of fudging the figures on the agreement’s economic impact and on its projected effects on reining in rising global temperatur­es.

The Republican’s announceme­nt drew a quick internatio­nal rebuke and firm assertions from other nations that they would proceed with the agreement regardless of the U.S. position, a dynamic very much on display at this week’s gathering in Beijing.

Energy ministers from Canada and the European Commission told an AP reporter they were disappoint­ed in the U.S. decision on the Paris accord. Perry said he heard no such direct criticism.

The former Texas governor faces cuts across a range of programs in his new position, from a 70-percent reduction for renewable and energy efficiency programs, to a 50-percent cut for a program that includes research to reduce pollution from coal, according to an analysis by the American Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Science.

Perry suggested during a Friday meeting with reporters that he would work with members of Congress to try to restore research spending.

 ?? NG HAN GUAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Visitors look at a model of a city run on clean energy during an internatio­nal clean energy conference held in Beijing, China. Energy ministers from around the world gathered in Beijing this week.
NG HAN GUAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Visitors look at a model of a city run on clean energy during an internatio­nal clean energy conference held in Beijing, China. Energy ministers from around the world gathered in Beijing this week.

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