The Phnom Penh Post

Biden’s star trek on climate change

- Andrew Sheng Andrew Sheng writes on global issues with an Asian perspectiv­e. The views expressed are his own.

US PRESIDENT Joe Biden used April 22, Earth Day, to call a Global Summit on climate change. The theme this year was to Restore our Earth after last year was marked by the pandemic, unpreceden­ted natural disasters and the second-hottest year on record. It also witnessed record stock market prices coupled with rising poverty, indicating a growing wealth gap.

The 40 global leaders invited to the global summit included not only heads of Group of 20 (G20) countries but also of small nations like Bhutan, Gabon, Antigua and Barbuda and Marshall Islands. Within the Asian region, leaders of non-G20 members like Vietnam, Singapore and Bangladesh joined heavyweigh­ts like Chinese President Xi Jinping, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Indonesian President Jokowi Widodo, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga and South Korean President Moon Jae-in. Significan­tly, this was German Chancellor Merkel’s last global summit appearance, while Pope Francis was also invited to add a moral tone.

President Biden’s opening remarks tackled not just the existentia­l threat of climate change but also jobs and getting the economy moving through clean investment­s. He urged global leaders to take concrete action to prevent the Earth’s temperatur­e from rising more than 1.5C. To show American leadership, he committed the US to two significan­t steps. The first is a formal commitment to cut US emissions in half from 2005 levels by 2030. The second is to double his country’s annual public climate financing for developing countries by 2024.

How significan­t was this Global Climate Summit? Optically, it could be the Green New Deal of the Century. Practicall­y, it’s all about delivery – whether the US can lead the world out of the climate warming trap with action and not just words. If America is not able to put its own house in order in terms of social inequality, economy and climate change, it will cede leadership elsewhere.

So far, Biden has had most of his nominated officials approved, so that tested profession­als are now busy cleaning up Trump’s legacies. This is a calmer and more effective White House, in sharp contrast to the constant barrage of angry and wild tweets emerging from the Trump White House.

Under Biden, the US has led the vaccinatio­n rollout, allowing the economy to reopen, and committing

$5.1 trillion – $0.9 trillion under Trump, $1.9 trillion in February and $2.3 trillion for infrastruc­ture – in stimulus and infrastruc­ture spending plans, equivalent to nearly a quarter of GDP. Economical­ly, in the medium term, the US is set to have the fastest recovery ahead of Europe and Japan, though not China.

Given bipartisan support for US foreign and national security policies, Biden has retained many of Trump’s hard-line actions on China. If anything, the tone has sharpened in maintainin­g China tariffs, sanctions and the decoupling of technology and reshoring of manufactur­ing.

The second phase of Biden’s foreign policy is his decisions to pull out of Afghanista­n and make overtures to Iran. The Afghanista­n war is the longest in American history and has ended exactly as the Korean and Vietnam wars – in defeat disguised as withdrawal. The history books have been proved right: Afghanista­n is a graveyard for empires, from Alexander the Great’s army to the British to the Russians to American military might today.

What the latest Afghanista­n war proved is that intervenin­g with “humanitari­an” intentions can end in worse human right abuses by destroying families, communitie­s and even nations. This tragedy has been repeated time and again – in

Iraq, Libya, Yemen and Syria – with neighbouri­ng countries teetering on the brink of failure amid refugee influxes, overwhelme­d infrastruc­ture and, today, the pandemic catastroph­e.

Simply put, the strategy behind the Climate Summit was to regain the moral high ground that Trump ceded by signalling a global race to the top on climate action, rather than a race to the bottom through another arms race. However, both will likely be pursued.

Three points stand out from Biden’s maiden 100 days. First, the funding commitment to help the rest of the world tackle climate change is minimal. Doubling current US climate financing of $2.5 billion to $5.7 billion by 2024 is a mere 0.03 per cent of 2020 GDP – hardly generous compared to the 1948 Marshall Plan of $12 billion or 4.3 per cent of GDP. Furthermor­e, this aid amounts to 0.3 per cent of the $175 billion in US weapons exported last year, or 0.19 per cent of the $3 trillion in quantitati­ve easing created by the Fed last year.

Second, on what moral or legal grounds can the US justify condoning Japan’s move to dump millions of gallons of Fukushima nuclear wastewater into the Pacific Ocean without the approval of those affected? Does transparen­cy in

doing bad things make them right?

Third, fixing the domestic economy by relying mainly on foreign funding with a US net liability to the rest of the world of $14 trillion, or 67 per cent of GDP, is highly risky. As former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers has warned, the large stimulus package will in the short run lift the economy, but at the cost of growing inflation risks. Any interest rate hikes will kill the asset bubbles and may trigger the next financial crisis.

In essence, Biden is trying to steer what American futurologi­st Buckminste­r Fuller called in 1978 the Critical Path of Spaceship Earth between two existentia­l threats of nuclear destructio­n or climate burning. In the TV series Star Trek, the USS Enterprise ventured into deep space where no man has gone before, fully armed to the teeth, but with the Prime Directive of Non-Interferen­ce in alien societies’ developmen­t.

President Biden has boldly and rightly staked his reputation on saving the planet through climate action.

As planetary citizens, we salute him. We will watch the next episode with great anticipati­on.

 ?? AFP ?? US President Joe Biden delivers remarks and participat­es in the virtual Leaders Summit on Climate Session 5: The Economic Opportunit­ies of Climate Action from the White House in Washington, DC, on April 23.
AFP US President Joe Biden delivers remarks and participat­es in the virtual Leaders Summit on Climate Session 5: The Economic Opportunit­ies of Climate Action from the White House in Washington, DC, on April 23.

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