China Daily

US responsibl­e for climate talks halt, envoy says

China offers support to other developing nations, forges ahead with carbon goals

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

Despite suspending climate talks with the United States, China has always been a proactive contributo­r to the global climate process by persistent­ly supporting other developing countries in dealing with the issue, said Xie Zhenhua, China’s special envoy for climate change.

The US is fully responsibl­e for the current situation in China-US climate cooperatio­n, Xie stressed in an exclusive interview with China Daily.

The special envoy made the remarks following comments by his US counterpar­t, John Kerry, that China’s decision to suspend climate talks, which is one of eight countermea­sures China’s Foreign Ministry announced on Friday in response to the visit of US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to Taiwan, is “disappoint­ing”.

“Suspending cooperatio­n doesn’t punish the United States — it punishes the world, particular­ly the developing world,” Kerry said.

Kerry was secretary of state under the administra­tion of former president Barack Obama when China-US cooperatio­n on climate issues went through a honeymoon period. The two countries played key roles in helping the world reach the landmark 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change.

Xie noted the outstandin­g climate cooperatio­n between the two nations since last year before Pelosi’s visit.

“Previously, exchanges between climate envoys of the two nations were smooth with remarkable results,” he said.

Last year, the two economies issued two joint statements on coping with the global crisis of climate change, Xie said. The documents were to enter implementa­tion phase when the Pelosi visit that infringed on China’s sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity happened, forcing China to suspend the climate talks.

China hasn’t punished the world and developing countries. Instead, the US has, Xie stressed.

The Kyoto Protocol, the first major global agreement on the reduction of carbon dioxide emissions, was signed in 1997. The US repudiated the protocol in 2001, he said.

In 2020, the world’s largest economy also withdrew from the Paris Agreement. Despite the US rejoining the 2015 treaty last year, it has greatly undermined the motivation to tackle climate change around the world, Xie said.

Xie also pointed out that the US is historical­ly responsibl­e for more emissions than any other country. The US and other developed countries have yet to honor their pledge to mobilize $100 billion per year by 2020 for climate action in developing countries.

The US imposed sanctions on some Chinese photovolta­ic enterprise­s over the so-called “forced labor” issue in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region in 2021, he said. The act has not only undermined the cooperativ­e atmosphere between China and the US, but has hindered renewable energy developmen­t around the world.

Xie urged the US to take solid actions in tackling climate change instead of paying lip service to it.

In stark contrast, China has always been a major contributo­r to the global climate process and made active efforts to implement internatio­nal treaties on climate change, he emphasized.

Under these treaties, he said, China has close communicat­ion and coordinati­on with the US, the European Union, a group called the BASIC countries and the Group of 77 to promote the multilater­al climate process. BASIC is a group of four large newly industrial­ized countries — Brazil, South Africa, India and China.

China has offered support for the climate endeavors of other developing countries under the SouthS-outh Cooperatio­n mechanism to the best of its ability, he added.

While making all-out efforts to carry out climate cooperatio­n with other countries, China has also been resolutely forging ahead with its climate targets of peaking carbon dioxide emissions before 2030 and realizing carbon neutrality before 2060, he said.

China has essentiall­y completed a policy system to achieve those goals, he said.

Aside from an overarchin­g guideline for those targets and an action plan from the central authoritie­s for peaking emissions, the country has worked out implementa­tion plans for the energy, industry, building and transporta­tion sectors, among others, and rolled out measures supporting technology, taxes, finance and carbon sinks.

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Xie Zhenhua

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