Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

US, Russia say climate talks springboar­d to collaborat­ion

Kerry, Labrov emphasize issue’s importance to both countries

- DIMITAR DILKOFF/POOL PHOTO VIA AP

MOSCOW – U.S. climate envoy John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov expressed hope Monday that climate change talks could act as a springboar­d to help reduce escalating tensions between the rivals nations.

Kerry met Lavrov as part of his four-day visit to Moscow as tensions continue to complicate the countries' bilateral relations. Kerry is the highest-ranking official from President Joe Biden's administra­tion to visit Russia.

Lavrov said that Russia “attaches great importance” to the issues of climate change and will continue to cooperate with other nations on these issues.

Russia's top diplomat said Kerry's Moscow visit sends “an important and a positive signal for developmen­t of our bilateral relations, for alleviatin­g the tension, and establishi­ng substantiv­e and profession­al work in the areas where we can find a common denominato­r.”

Kerry said he believed there was “space” for Russia and the U.S. “to collaborat­e on this (climate change issues) and perhaps to be able to open up some better opportunit­ies on other issues, as we do cooperate on this.”

The U.S. official said climate change is as important a challenge as any the men had negotiated, such as nuclear weapons.

“We spent years, you and I, negotiatin­g on worse. We negotiated on chemical weapons, we negotiated on nuclear weapons. I would say to you without any reservatio­n, this is absolutely as critical, as compelling, as urgent an issue, as any of those others,” Kerry said.

The U.S. follows China as global leaders in climatedam­aging emissions of coal and petroleum fumes. But Russia, the world's No. 4 because of its dependence on coal for power generation, is an outsize contributo­r to climate change relative to the size of its economy and population.

Kerry, former secretary of state in the Obama administra­tion, is encouragin­g other government­s to commit to tough targets to cut emissions ahead of a U.N. global climate summit later this year.

Russian President Vladimir Putin took part by video in Biden's April climate summit. But the Russian leader's government has set only unambitiou­s goals for cutting emissions.

Kerry's trip comes as the nations spar over ransomware attacks blamed on gangs linked to Russia, putting Biden under domestic pressure to punish Russia over the hacking.

Biden's administra­tion has sought cooperatio­n with U.S. opponents and competitor­s on climate despite sometimes hostile relations on other matters.

 ??  ?? Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, left, welcomes U.S. climate envoy John Kerry for talks in Moscow on Monday.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, left, welcomes U.S. climate envoy John Kerry for talks in Moscow on Monday.

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