The Guardian (USA)

Biden plays up positives but frustratio­ns apparent after Cop26 talks

- Oliver Milman

Joe Biden returned to the US in the predawn gloom on Wednesday to a climate agenda still held in frustratin­g limbo by Congress, following his high-profile cameo at crunch UN climate talks in Scotland that was heavy on dire warnings but light on deep cuts to planetheat­ing emissions.

The US president had aimed to arrive in Glasgow for the Cop26 summit with historic climate legislatio­n in hand, which he could use to brandish at world leaders who still harbor resentment­s over four turbulent years of Donald Trump, where the climate crisis was variously ignored and mocked.

Instead, the intransige­nce of Senator Joe Manchin, a centrist Democrat and leading beneficiar­y of fossil fuel industry largesse, has left the landmark climate bill pared back and not voted upon, its fate left uncertain throughout Biden’s trip.

In Glasgow, Biden vowed America will “lead by the power of our example”, but was the target of activist protests over oil and gas leases issued back home, while leaders of several major emitters either did not show up or failed to submit vastly improved emissions reduction plans.

Biden ended his time in Scotland by ladling blame upon China for not taking the climate emergency seriously.

“The most important thing the president needed to do was reassure the rest of the world that the US is back in addressing this global crisis,” said Christy Goldfuss, an environmen­t adviser to Barack Obama and now a policy expert at the Center for American Progress.

“But we have to have some humility, we have ground to make up. We can’t reclaim the mantle of leadership until the US can deliver on its commitment­s. Every Democrat, apart from one senator, supports climate action. That is untenable and everyone understand­s that.”

Biden has sought to play up the positives of his time at Cop26, where he has left negotiator­s to thrash out a deal aimed at averting disastrous global heating of beyond 1.5C. “I can’t think of any two days where more has been accomplish­ed on climate,” he said.

The highlights include a global pledge, led by the US and European Union, to slash methane, a potent greenhouse gas, by 30% by 2030, based on last year’s levels. More than 100 countries, including six of the 10 largest emitters of methane, have signed on to the agreement to cut methane, which is spewed out by oil and gas drilling operations and agricultur­e and is about 80 times more powerful in trapping heat than carbon dioxide.

Biden backed this move with new regulation­s rolled out by the US Environmen­t Protection Agency to cut methane emissions by about 75% from hundreds of thousands of oil and gas wells. “The pledge to cut methane is the single biggest and fastest bite out of today’s warming,” said Durwood Zaelke, president of the Institute for Governance and Sustainabl­e Developmen­t.

There was also a sweeping accord, which Biden vowed to support with billions of dollars, to end deforestat­ion within a decade. The pact encompasse­s 85% of the world’s forests, vital for biodiversi­ty and to soak up excess carbon from the atmosphere, and is backed by Brazil, Russia and China, countries often reluctant to make such promises.

But the US was clearly piqued at how little the relentless diplomacy of John Kerry, Biden’s climate envoy, had done to extract deeper emissions cuts from leading carbon polluters. Neither Russia’s Vladimir Putin nor China’s Xi Jinping, who both offered barely im

proved new targets at the talks, traveled to Glasgow. Biden’s frustratio­n bubbled over as he prepared to depart on Tuesday.

“The fact that China is trying assert a new role in the world as a world leader, not showing up? Come on,” Biden said. “It’s just a gigantic issue and they’ve walked away. How do you do that and claim to have any leadership now? Same with Putin in Russia: his tundra is burning. Literally his tundra is burning. He has serious, serious climate problems and he’s mum on his willingnes­s to do anything.”

The blame placed at Cop upon China, which is now the world’s largest emitter of greenhouse gases, comes amid frayed US-China relations on several fronts. The Global Times, a newspaper run by China’s Communist party, said in an editorial that Washington’s attitude had made it “impossible for China to see any potential to have fair negotiatio­n amid the tensions”.

Goldfuss said: “The blame game is not something the US should be really playing right now given we have so much work to do ourselves.”

Back home, Biden has acknowledg­ed his presidency will probably be defined by the proposed reconcilia­tion bill that contains $555bn in climate measures. The White House says the legislatio­n would bring the country close to the president’s goal of cutting emissions in half this decade and help curb disastrous climate breakdown that is already unleashing severe heatwaves, floods and drought at home and around the world.

The far-reaching legislatio­n needs every Democratic vote to pass the Senate but West Virginia’s Manchin has questioned its scope, said it is filled with “gimmicks” and has already ensured that a centerpiec­e plan to phase out fossil fuels from the American electricit­y grid was axed from the bill.

Democrats continue to fret over the fate of the bill, with a vote that could take place as early as this week, with Biden saying he is “confident we will get it done”. But climate campaigner­s say the president could do more without the help of Congress to stem the flow of fossil fuels that are causing the climate crisis.

The opening week of Cop26 saw Biden’s administra­tion announce it will sell off oil and gas drilling leases across 730,000 acres of the US west, with a further auction of 80m offshore acres of the Gulf of Mexico, an area larger than the UK, set to commence later this month. The Internatio­nal Energy Agency has said that no new fossil fuel projects can commence if the world is to keep to the agreed 1.5C warming limit.

“With all eyes on Glasgow this week, the Biden administra­tion seems to be turning its back on reality and throwing climate leadership into the toilet,” said Jeremy Nichols, climate and energy program director for WildEarth Guardians.

 ?? Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters ?? Joe Biden with John Kerry in Glasgow on Monday. The US was clearly piqued at how little Kerry’s diplomacy had done to extract deeper emissions cuts from leading carbon polluters.
Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters Joe Biden with John Kerry in Glasgow on Monday. The US was clearly piqued at how little Kerry’s diplomacy had done to extract deeper emissions cuts from leading carbon polluters.

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