The Jerusalem Post

John Kerry: US to deepen climate collabs with Israel

US envoy meets Sliman • Jerusalem expected to renew memorandum of understand­ing with EPA

- • By MAAYAN JAFFE-HOFFMAN

Israel is expected to renew the memorandum of understand­ing with the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA) later this year, the Environmen­tal Protection Ministry said Friday.

The US and Israel have engaged in scientific and technical collaborat­ion to protect the environmen­t since the early 1990s. An MOU was signed initially in 2012 and renewed in 2018.

The announceme­nt was made following a Friday meeting between US Special Presidenti­al Envoy for Climate John Kerry and Environmen­tal Protection Minister Idit Silman.

Kerry’s trip includes visits to Jordan, Dubai, Jerusalem and Oslo, where, in addition to having attended the wedding of Jordanian Crown Prince Al-Hussein bin Abdullah II and Rajwa Al Seif, he is holding meetings with officials regarding global cooperatio­n to combat the climate crisis.

Kerry and Silman discussed their desire to strengthen profession­al cooperatio­n in the field of climate, with a focus on energy and transporta­tion, as both countries aim to reduce their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.

President Joe Biden has said the US aims to reduce GHG pollution by up to 52% from 2005 to 2030. Israel has pledged to reduce emissions by 27% by 2030 compared to 2015. |However, according to a recent report by the Environmen­tal Protection Ministry, the country is set to reduce its GHG emissions by only 12% by then.

Silman stressed that her team is working on moving the country’s climate bill ahead of COP 28, which starts on November 30 in Dubai. The bill was set for

ministeria­l approval last month but was delayed. This past week, a report by the OECD said that Israel would likely remain off track from meeting its ambitious climate goals without the climate law.

Experts have said that Israel is behind European countries concerning the level of commitment made by the government toward mitigating environmen­tal damage, and Israel is behind nearly all OECD countries. In addition, Israel is one of the only developed countries yet to pass a climate law.

Kerry emphasized that the climate crisis is acute, and if all countries do not act immediatel­y to reduce GHG emissions, “we will not be able to meet the goals we committed to in the climate treaty.” Kerry was referring to commitment­s made by hundreds of countries under the framework of the 2015 Paris Agreement.

Kerry also said climate legislatio­n

is necessary to meet these obligation­s, the Environmen­tal Protection Ministry said.

“Kerry emphasized the importance of determined and joint action to deal with climate change and the promotion of joint projects to achieve these goals,” Silman said. “The meeting was also a significan­t milestone in Israel’s preparatio­n for the climate conference

that will be held in Dubai this year, which we intend to reach with an ambitious and applicable climate law and put the State of Israel on the same level as the developed countries of the OECD.”

Kerry and Silman also discussed opportunit­ies for other unique projects related to nature conservati­on, specifical­ly in the area of marine ecology.

 ?? (Environmen­tal Protection Ministry) ?? JOHN KERRY, US special presidenti­al envoy for climate, and his team meet on Friday with Environmen­tal Protection Minister Idit Silman and her team.
(Environmen­tal Protection Ministry) JOHN KERRY, US special presidenti­al envoy for climate, and his team meet on Friday with Environmen­tal Protection Minister Idit Silman and her team.

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