China Daily

Climate vows stressed after US’ false line

Beijing’s envoy says Washington can’t speak for world, following halt to talks

- By ZHAO HUANXIN in Washington huanxinzha­o@chinadaily­usa.com

We will stay committed to meeting our goals of carbon peaking and carbon neutrality, take an active part in internatio­nal cooperatio­n on climate change, provide support and help for other developing countries as best as we can.”

Qin Gang, Chinese ambassador to the US

China remains committed to internatio­nal cooperatio­n on climate change and honors the promises it has made, a top Chinese envoy in Washington said on Tuesday, as he refuted a US claim that the suspension of climate talks with it is “punishing the entire world”.

Following a visit by US House of Representa­tives Speaker Nancy Pelosi to Taiwan on Aug 2, China decided on Friday to halt climate change talks with the United States, an action that was among the eight countermea­sures announced by China in response to the provocativ­e move that has infringed on its core interests.

On Monday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said of the ceasing of climate talks: “That’s not punishing the United States; that’s punishing the entire, the entire world and especially the developing world.”

But on Tuesday night, Ambassador Qin Gang said via video at the 4th US-China Business Forum in New York that “the US cannot represent the whole world”.

He said China-US cooperatio­n in various areas cannot do without the general atmosphere of the bilateral relations.

“We will stay committed to meeting our goals of carbon peaking and carbon neutrality, take an active part in internatio­nal cooperatio­n on climate change, provide support and help for other developing countries as best as we can, and make our due contributi­on to a global response to climate change,” Qin said at the event, which was held by Forbes China.

China has vowed to peak greenhouse gas emissions before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality by 2060.

“China always takes the promises it makes very seriously, and does everything possible to honor them,” he said.

“It is hoped that the US should earnestly fulfill its historical responsibi­lity and obligation on climate change.”

The ambassador noted that the US has used the lie of “forced labor” in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region in Northwest China to sanction and suppress Chinese photovolta­ic enterprise­s in the solar energy field, in a move that has caused direct damage to China-US climate cooperatio­n and forced many Chinese workers, including Uygurs, to become jobless.

In June, despite the strong opposition from China, the US insisted on implementi­ng the “Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act”, a piece of legislatio­n that China’s Foreign Ministry called an attempt to create “forced unemployme­nt” and a “forced return to poverty” in Xinjiang.

Craig Allen, president of the

US-China Business Council, said that he is “not a big fan” of the act for many reasons.

“The most important one is that I think it’ll just hurt a lot of Uygurs who are going to find it yet more difficult to find jobs. That’s exactly the opposite of what we would like to happen,” Allen told the New York forum.

In his speech, Qin reiterated that the Taiwan question is the most important and most sensitive issue at the very heart of China-US relations. If not well handled, it will bring a “serious and even disruptive impact on our cooperatio­n”.

Commitment broken

He said Pelosi’s visit last week openly broke the US’ commitment not to develop official relations with Taiwan, and is a serious violation of the one-China principle and the provisions of the three Sino-US joint communique­s.

“Americans believe in the spirit of the contract. You are from the business community, and you know that businesspe­ople take the commitment­s they make very seriously,” Qin told the forum.

The ambassador also noted that the most pressing challenge to China-US economic and trade cooperatio­n is whether the bilateral relations can maintain stability, given that the China-US relationsh­ip is at a crossroads.

“Using strategic competitio­n to define our ties, taking China as the primary competitor and most serious long-term challenge — such mispercept­ion and misjudgmen­t will only raise the tension and lead our relations to the track of confrontat­ion and conflict, and put even more pressure on our economic and trade cooperatio­n,” he said.

Sean Stein, chairman of the US Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai, said US businesses are looking at China to be the growth story over the next decade, and thus to continue investing in China, even though profitabil­ity has been dented following COVID-19 outbreaks.

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