Santa Fe New Mexican

Foreign leaders lament U.S. exit, but say it won’t stop climate effort.

Leaders double down and say they won’t stop climate change effort

- By Michael D. Shear and Alison Smale

WASHINGTON — World leaders vowed Friday to confront climate change in a new internatio­nal coalition that no longer includes the U.S. government, moving quickly to reshape global environmen­tal alliances after President Donald Trump’s decision to abandon the Paris climate accord.

At the White House, Scott Pruitt, the EPA administra­tor, declared that the president had “nothing to be apologetic about” after announcing his decision Thursday. He hailed Trump’s actions to “put America’s interests first” and said that “exiting Paris does not mean disengagem­ent.”

But in foreign capitals, and in communitie­s across the United States that vowed to continue their efforts to combat the effects of climate change, that is exactly what Trump’s withdrawal seemed to mean. Internatio­nal officials set in motion plans to leave the U.S. government behind while they look for ways to stave off the direst consequenc­es of the warming of the planet.

In Germany, Chancellor Angela Merkel said Trump’s actions “will not deter all of us who feel obliged to protect this Earth.” Koichi Yamamoto, the Japanese environmen­t minister, told reporters that Trump had “turned his back on the wisdom of human beings.” Donald Tusk, president of the European Council, said the fight against climate change “will continue with or without the United States.”

Turning that message quickly into action, EU leaders on Friday concluded a two-day summit meeting in Brussels with Prime Minister Li Keqiang of China — a not-so-veiled diplomatic threat to Trump that Europe will find a partner to fight climate change, one way or another.

“Today we are stepping up our cooperatio­n on climate change with China, which means that today China and Europe have demonstrat­ed solidarity with future generation­s and responsibi­lity for the whole planet,” Tusk said, calling Trump’s actions Thursday “a big mistake.”

Hua Chunying, a spokeswoma­n for China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, indicated that her country was eager to jump into the void left by Trump’s departure from the Paris accord. During a briefing in Beijing, Hua

expressed support for the Paris Agreement and the need for global partnershi­ps.

“China is willing to enhance cooperatio­n with all sides to together advance the follow-up negotiatio­ns on details of implementi­ng the Paris Agreement and also advance its effective implementa­tion,” she said.

In the United States, a group of mayors, governors, academics and business leaders began an effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions without the involvemen­t of the federal government, and it is negotiatin­g with the United Nations to submit a plan for reducing those emissions on its own.

Before Trump’s action this week, it would have made little sense for individual cities, states or businesses to try to negotiate climate change standards on their own. But less than 24 hours after the president’s Rose Garden ceremony, leaders of the global effort to confront climate change welcomed that approach.

Miguel Arias Cañete, the European Union’s commission­er for climate action and energy, told reporters in Brussels that the European Union would continue carrying out the Paris Agreement with the assistance of a variety of American individual­s, companies and authoritie­s.

“We will establish a dialogue within the United States with all the players that in the United States support ambitious climate change policies,” he said.

Trump’s rebuke of the agreement, signed by 195 nations in 2015, deepened a trans-Atlantic rift laid bare during a recent NATO summit meeting in Brussels and a Group of 7 meeting in Italy, when the president lectured other leaders on trade, climate and military spending. On Thursday, the leaders of France, Germany and Italy issued a joint statement rejecting Trump’s assertion that he would renegotiat­e

the climate accord.

And officials around the world said they would press for the climate agreement to be respected regardless of the American decision. “I can assure you, France will not give up the fight,” President Emmanuel Macron said.

U.S. officials insisted Friday that the United States was not abandoning efforts to fight climate change, even as several of the president’s top aides refused to say whether Trump believed the idea of human-caused global warming was a hoax, as he has asserted in the past.

Sean Spicer, the White House press secretary, said the president would gauge the possibilit­y of working with other world leaders and with Congress on ways to deal with climate change that safeguard the U.S. economy.

“He’ll obviously continue to talk to world leaders,” Spicer said. “But that’s a process that has to evolve.”

Several administra­tion officials stressed that the federal government would continue to try to reduce pollution, though Trump and Pruitt, the EPA administra­tor, have made it a top priority to roll back many of President Barack Obama’s aggressive emissionre­duction efforts.

“I don’t think we’re going to change our ongoing efforts to reduce those emissions in the future either, so hopefully people can keep it in perspectiv­e,” Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said.

Vice President Mike Pence asserted that the United States had demonstrat­ed what he called “real progress” in reducing carbon emissions, and he accused liberal groups and Democratic lawmakers of trying to turn concern about the environmen­t into a political cause.

“It’s long been a goal of the liberal left in this country to advance a climate change agenda,” Pence said.

 ?? JIM WILSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Protesters at the San Francisco Federal Building demonstrat­e Friday against President Donald Trump’s withdrawal from the Paris climate accord.
JIM WILSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES Protesters at the San Francisco Federal Building demonstrat­e Friday against President Donald Trump’s withdrawal from the Paris climate accord.

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