The Arizona Republic

US out of Paris climate deal – for now

- John Bacon Contributi­ng: Beth Burger

The formal exit from the global accord could change if Joe Biden wins the presidenti­al election.

ARLINGTON, Va. – The United States formally dropped out of the Paris Agreement on climate change Wednesday, finally fulfilling a vow President Donald Trump made more than three years ago.

That could all change, however, if former Vice President Joe Biden squeezes out a victory over Trump in Tuesday’s election. Biden has pledged to rejoin the agreement immediatel­y after being sworn into office.

The historic 2015 deal signed by President Barack Obama includes almost 200 nations in a single agreement to combat global warming. Trump, however, has championed fossil fuels in the U.S. and claimed the deal unfairly placed few restrictio­ns on India and China while forcing the U.S. to curb carbon emissions.

“The terrible, one-sided climate accord was a total disaster for our country,” Trump reiterated at an energy conference in Pittsburgh last year.

Bob Perciasepe, president of the Arlington-based nonprofit Center for Climate and Energy Solutions, called the U.S. withdrawal a “shameful retreat” from obligation­s that leaders have to the planet and to future generation­s.

“No country can withdraw from the reality of climate change, and no country bears greater responsibi­lity or pos

sesses greater capacity to lead the world in confrontin­g this reality head-on,” Perciasepe said. “Other nations thankfully remain committed to the Paris Agreement, and we are confident that the United States will in time recommit itself to this vital global cause.”

May Boeve, executive director of the California-based global environmen­tal advocacy group 350.org, said a protracted lack of U.S. leadership on climate issues risks sabotaging other areas of global cooperatio­n, such as trade and human rights.

Carbon dioxide emissions trap heat in the atmosphere and fuel conditions for climate change. By 2050, climate change could wipe out some species, place more homes in floodplain­s and trigger longer, more intense heat waves, scientists have said.

The Paris accord requires countries to set their own voluntary targets for reducing greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide. The only binding requiremen­t is that nations have to accurately report on their efforts.

“We have a really good environmen­tal record,” U.S. EPA Administra­tor Andrew Wheeler said in a recent interview with the USA TODAY Network. Wheeler, before taking over the agency, had been an EPA employee and also a lobbyist for energy, oil and uranium processing companies.

“I would say that the Obama administra­tion only focused on climate change and not on the nuts and bolts of what the EPA is supposed to be doing,” Wheeler said. “And we’ve been doing all of it at the same time.”

The actual withdrawal took so long because of rules built into the agreement aimed at slowing efforts to drop out. Nations could not provide formal notice of withdrawal until three years after ratificati­on, which took place in fall 2016. A12-month notice period was then required.

Rejoining would be much simpler: a letter of intent followed by a 30-day waiting period.

 ?? GEOFF CRIMMINS/AP ?? Kristin Green, left, and Kayla Bordelon, from the Citizens Climate Lobby, hold signs and wave to motorists Tuesday in Moscow, Idaho.
GEOFF CRIMMINS/AP Kristin Green, left, and Kayla Bordelon, from the Citizens Climate Lobby, hold signs and wave to motorists Tuesday in Moscow, Idaho.

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