Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Is climate pact easier on China, India?

- Jon Greenberg

President Joe Biden has been systematic­ally undoing former President Donald Trump’s policies on climate change. Case in point — Trump took the United States out of the Paris Climate Agreement. On Biden’s first day, he signed paperwork to bring the United States back in.

Under the Paris agreement, about 200 nations promised to set goals to cut their greenhouse gas emissions. Each nation decides for itself what its goal will be. The hope is that cumulative­ly, those reductions would limit global temperatur­e increases to no more than 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

Florida Republican Sen. Rick Scott, who chairs the National Republican Senatorial Committee, criticized Biden’s move.

“We have to stop joining deals that are bad for America,” Scott said in a statement to the press. “President Biden is throwing the U.S. back into the Paris Agreement just to appease his liberal friends. This deal does nothing to hold real polluters, like Communist China and India, accountabl­e.”

There’s debate over how well the agreement’s overall approach will meet the challenge of climate change. Here, we focus on Scott’s claim that the agreement puts the U.S. at a disadvanta­ge because it does nothing to hold “real” polluters like China and India accountabl­e.

Limited enforcemen­t

Under the agreement, each country submits a set of greenhouse gas reduction targets called a Nationally Determined Contributi­on. Countries have been sending these to the United Nations since they launched the agreement

in 2015, with new or updated goals due in 2020, and every five years after that.

For example, in its 2016 plan, China said that by 2030, it would lower carbon dioxide emissions per unit of GDP by 60% to 65% compared with 2005 releases. So, while its emissions would rise as its economy grew, they wouldn’t rise as much as they would have if everything worked the way it did in 2005. China said it would aim for carbon dioxide emissions to peak in about 2030.

India set a more modest goal of cutting emissions by 33% to 35% per unit of GDP by 2030. Both China and India had additional goals on their list.

Scott said the agreement has no way to hold nations accountabl­e if they stray from meeting their goals.

Benjamin Zycher, resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, a market-oriented think tank, said Scott has a point.

“The Nationally Determined Contributi­ons are strictly voluntary,” Zycher

naming and shaming if these pledges are too weak or are not fulfilled,” said Michael Gerrard, director of the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia Law School.

Countries are required to report their progress publicly. Law professor Daniel Bodansky at the Arizona State University College of Law said transparen­cy matters, and those progress reports are not simply taken on faith.

“The agreement provides for both expert and peer review of these reports,” Bodansky said.

Holding to internatio­nal norms is a form of pressure, Bodansky argued. Zycher countered that China is autocratic and can ignore domestic and internatio­nal pressure more easily than the United States, Canada and Europe.

Unfair advantage?

Gerrard said Scott’s reference to China and India was misleading.

“It implies that China and India are subject to weaker requiremen­ts than the U.S.,” Gerrard said. “That is incorrect.”

The agreement’s compliance rules might be weak, but they apply equally to all participat­ing countries. The Biden administra­tion will determine how ambitious the U.S. goals will be when it rejoins the agreement. At this point, we don’t know what those will be.

Gerrard and Bodansky both fault Scott for calling China and India the “real polluters.” The actual rankings are more complicate­d. As this chart shows, by one measure, China releases more said. “There is no enforcemen­t mechanism.”

Zycher is no fan of the Paris agreement. But even those who think it holds promise agree that it lacks teeth.

“There are no penalties other than

carbon dioxide than the U.S. By another, the U.S. tops China.

“The United States is the second biggest emitter of greenhouse gases in the world, and has higher per capita emissions than either China or India,” Bodansky said. “It is misleading to point the finger at China and India and label them as the real polluters.”

By the yardstick of carbon dioxide releases relative to the size of the economy, the latest numbers come from 2016 World Bank data. China was at the top with 0.5 kilograms per dollar of GDP, with India and the U.S. tied at 0.3 kilograms per dollar of GDP.

We reached out to Scott’s office and did not hear back.

Our ruling

Scott said the Paris Climate Agreement is bad for the United States because it fails to hold “real polluters” such as China and India accountabl­e.

People who study the agreement agree that it lacks teeth to hold each country to its carbon dioxide reduction goals. But its rules apply equally to all nations. China and India are treated the same as the U.S.

China emits almost twice as much carbon dioxide as the U.S., but per person, the ranking is flipped, and the U.S. emits twice as much as China. By both standards, India emits much less than either country.

The Paris agreement lacks strict enforcemen­t, but Scott’s comparison­s to China and India are misleading. We rate this claim Mostly False.

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