Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Climate delegates note rules’ progress

U.S. team constructi­ve at Bonn talks

- FRANK JORDANS

BONN, Germany — Delegates on Saturday concluded an all-night negotiatin­g session at this year’s global climate talks, expressing satisfacti­on at the progress made toward creating a comprehens­ive rule book for fighting global warming.

The two-week meeting in Bonn, Germany, was billed as a “blue-collar” event designed to hammer out the technical details of the 2015 Paris climate accord. But fears had loomed large beforehand that the administra­tion of U.S. President Donald Trump, who rejects the Paris agreement, would seek to block any advances seen as counter to American interests.

In the end, most agreed that U.S. diplomats had engaged constructi­vely, while delegation­s from several American states, cities and businesses were praised for committing themselves to the goals of the Paris agreement.

Saudi Arabia, however, held up a final agreement for several hours over objections to a phrase it feared might allow for future levies on fossil fuels like oil.

“There has been positive momentum all around us,” said Fiji’s Prime Minister Frank Bainimaram­a, who presided over the meeting and swung the gavel to close it about 7 a.m.

“We leave Bonn having notched up some notable achievemen­ts,” Bainimaram­a said, citing agreements on agricultur­e, ocean protection, indigenous people’s rights and the launch of a new system to help people in poor countries get insurance against the effects of climate change.

Many countries are already feeling the heat that is enveloping the globe, with floods, hurricanes and droughts across the world in recent months adding a sense of urgency to the talks.

Environmen­tal groups expressed satisfacti­on at the outcome of the negotiatio­ns, while noting there’s much still to do and little time left to ensure the Paris accord’s goal of keeping global warming below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) is met.

Experts say worldwide average temperatur­es have already risen 1 degree Celsius since pre- industrial times, largely due to carbon emissions from the United States and Europe over the past century.

“The conference gets a grade of ‘ meets expectatio­ns,’” said Andrew Deutz of The Nature Conservanc­y, an Arlington, Va.-based environmen­tal group. “We are still headed in the right direction, but since the U.S. took its foot off the accelerato­r, the risk of global climate action slowing down has increased.”

U.S. diplomat Judith Garber, speaking at the talks Thursday, reiterated Trump’s position that the United States will leave the Paris accord but added that “we remain open to the possibilit­y of rejoining at a later date under terms more favorable to the American people.”

Garber, the acting assistant secretary of state for oceans and internatio­nal environmen­tal and scientific affairs, said Washington remains “committed to mitigating greenhouse gas emissions through, among other things, increased innovation on sustainabl­e energy and energy efficiency, and working toward low greenhouse gas emissions energy systems.”

The conciliato­ry tone coming from U.S. diplomats was at odds with the more combative position taken by White House adviser George David Banks, who raised eyebrows by hosting a pro-coal event during the talks.

“Having already abandoned its leadership role on climate, the Trump administra­tion appears to be living in an alternate universe with its focus on fossil fuels,” said Paula Caballero, who heads the climate program of the Washington- based World Resources Institute.

Caballero noted that the leaders of U.S. states, cities and businesses — who went to Bonn separately from the White House and State Department delegation­s — earned widespread approval for pledging to honor the Paris accord.

Germany, which hosted the meeting, received mixed reviews. While many praised the country’s negotiator­s for brokering deals between opposing groups at the talks, there was also disappoint­ment that German Chancellor Angela Merkel failed to join other rich countries in announcing a firm deadline for phasing out the use of coalfired power plants.

Merkel is currently locked in coalition talks with the environmen­talist Green party and the pro- business Free Democrats, who disagree about the use of coal.

The Bonn meeting was a stepping stone toward next year’s talks in Katowice, Poland, where key decisions will have to be made, including on finalizing the Paris rulebook and raising countries’ national ambitions for cutting greenhouse gas emissions.

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