Albuquerque Journal

Protesters disrupt U.S. event at climate talks

Panel also faces hostile audience

- BY FRANK JORDANS

BONN, Germany — Protesters drowned out speeches by White House advisers and business representa­tives Monday at an event the U.S. government sponsored at the U.N. climate talks in Germany promoting the use of fossil fuels and nuclear energy.

About 200 protesters stood up 10 minutes into the event and began singing an anti-coal song to the tune of “God Bless the U.S.A.” They were ushered out of the room without further incident.

The event late Monday was the only one the U.S. delegation organized at the ongoing climate talks in Bonn. The American delegates are being closely watched by diplomats from the other 194 nations at the conference because of President Donald Trump’s announceme­nt that he wants to quit the 2015 Paris climate accord.

Before the panel event, the governors of Oregon and Washington — Kate Brown and Jay Inslee — said Trump’s rejection of climate change was “a dead end.”

“What you’re going to hear today is essentiall­y Donald Trump trying to sell 8-track tapes in a Spotify streaming world,” Inslee told reporters. “That is not going to cut it.” Both Oregon and Washington are part of a coalition backing the Paris accord.

George David Banks, a White House adviser who was part of the U.S. panel, said ruling out the use of fossil fuels and other non-renewable sources of energy was only controvers­ial “if we choose to bury our heads in the sand and ignore the reality of the global energy system.”

After the singing protesters left, the panel faced largely hostile questions from the audience about the facts and figures presented to support the continued use of fossil fuels.

The event took place as a new report released Monday showed global carbon emissions will reach a record high in 2017, dashing hopes that levels of the heat-trapping gas might have plateaued following three consecutiv­e years when they didn’t go up at all.

The talks in Bonn, now in their second week, are intended to hammer out some of the nitty-gritty details for implementi­ng the Paris accord. Participat­ing countries agreed to keep global warming significan­tly below 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit.

Key topics include how to measure individual countries’ efforts, taking stock of what’s been achieved so far and setting the new emissions reduction targets needed to reach the Paris goal.

Developing countries also are pushing for rich nations to pay for some of the devastatin­g impacts climate change inevitably is going to have, particular­ly on poor communitie­s around the world.

Poor nations see the issue of financial compensati­on, known in U.N. parlance as “loss and damage,” as a matter of fairness. They argue that rising sea levels and more extreme weather will hit them disproport­ionately hard, even though they have contribute­d only a fraction of the carbon emissions blamed for global warming.

Rich countries counter that they are already paying billions of dollars to help developing nations reduce emissions — such as by switching to renewable energy — and to adapt to climate change.

“Without that support forthcomin­g from the developed countries, there’s going to be some real fireworks at the end of this week,” said Alden Meyer, strategy and policy director for the Union of Concerned Scientists, an advocacy group in Washington.

Formal decisions on most issues won’t be taken until next year’s meeting in Poland, but few want to leave progress until the last minute. Green groups said it might fall to leaders to break a deadlock over issues such as compensati­on for countries hardest hit by global warming. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron will take part in a highlevel event Wednesday.

While other developed countries reject the Trump administra­tion’s stance on the Paris agreement, their views on loss and damage are largely in step with Washington’s.

“It’s fair to say that other developed countries are hiding behind the U.S. on the loss and damage,” Meyer said. “They need to be called out on this.”

 ?? ANDY WONG/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A passenger plane flies behind steam and white smoke from a coal-fired power plant in Beijing in February. Scientists at U.N. climate talks Monday project that global carbon pollution has risen in 2017.
ANDY WONG/ASSOCIATED PRESS A passenger plane flies behind steam and white smoke from a coal-fired power plant in Beijing in February. Scientists at U.N. climate talks Monday project that global carbon pollution has risen in 2017.

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