Kuwait Times

Xi, Macron unite on climate as US withdraws from Paris pact

World’s largest economy the sole major outlier from the agreement

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BEIJING: Chinese leader Xi Jinping and French President Emmanuel Macron declared yesterday that the Paris climate pact was “irreversib­le” showing a united front after Washington formally withdrew from the accord this week. The joint declaratio­n came at the end of Macron’s second visit to China, which started on Monday in Shanghai and included talks on trade and the Iranian nuclear issue.

The French leader also said he told Xi there was a need for dialogue to resolve months of unrest in Hong Kong — ignoring Beijing’s prior warning that such sensitive topics should not be on the agenda. But Xi and Macron found common ground on climate change. Major powers expressed regret and concern after President Donald Trump went ahead with the pullout from the Paris accord despite mounting evidence of the reality and impact of climate change.

Washington presented its withdrawal letter to the United Nations on Monday, the first possible date under the accord negotiated by Trump’s predecesso­r Barack Obama, making the world’s largest economy the sole major outlier from the agreement. In a joint written statement, Xi and Macron reaffirmed “their firm support for the Paris accord which they consider as an irreversib­le process and a compass for strong action on climate”.

Without directly naming the US, Macron said he “deplores the choices made by others” as he sat next to Xi following the talks at the imposing Great Hall of the People in the Chinese capital. “But I want to look at them as marginal choices,” Macron said. With the European Union, China and Russia backing the pact, he added, “the isolated choice of one or another is not enough to change the course of the world. It only leads to marginaliz­ation.”

‘Law of the jungle’

In his remarks, Xi took a veiled swipe at the United States, which launched a trade war with China last year and has angered Beijing on various diplomatic issues. “We advocate for mutual respect and equal treatment, and are opposed to the law of the jungle and acts of intimidati­on,” Xi said. “We advocate for openness, inclusion and for mutually beneficial cooperatio­n, and are opposed to protection­ism and a zero-sum game.”

China’s efforts against climate change are key as it is the world’s biggest emitter of greenhouse gases. Xi also called on the internatio­nal community to “jointly protect our homeland planet Earth”, saying “we are against the attempt to place national interests above the common interests of humanity”. In a document titled the “Beijing Call for Biodiversi­ty Conservati­on and Climate Change”, the two leaders voiced their determinat­ion to improve internatio­nal cooperatio­n to “ensure a complete and efficient implementa­tion of the Paris accord”. The document includes a commitment to restoring almost a third of degraded land as well as eliminatin­g fossil fuel subsidies in the medium term.

Unrest in Hong Kong

After the meeting, Macron said at a news conference at the French embassy that he had raised the unrest in Hong Kong during his talks with Xi. “I obviously conveyed our concerns, which are shared by Europe,” Macron said, adding that he told Xi that there was a need for “de-escalation through dialogue.” The internatio­nal finance hub has been convulsed by five months of huge and increasing­ly violent protests calling for greater democratic freedoms.

A Chinese foreign ministry official had warned prior to Macron’s visit that Hong Kong was a matter of China’s internal affairs and should not be on the diplomatic agenda. But it did not stop the two sides from striking deals, including an agreement to protect 200 European and Chinese agricultur­al products — whose names are tied to their regions — against counterfei­ting, from Champagne to Feta cheese and Panjin rice.

The two sides also committed to signing by January 31 a contract for the constructi­on of a nuclear fuel recycling plant in China, which would involve French energy giant Orano. On Iran, Macron said the two countries agreed to deepen joint efforts to convince Tehran to “fully respect its obligation­s” under the 2015 nuclear deal with major powers.

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 ?? — AFP ?? BEIJING: French President Emmanuel Macron (L) shakes hands with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang before a meeting at the Great Hall of the People.
— AFP BEIJING: French President Emmanuel Macron (L) shakes hands with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang before a meeting at the Great Hall of the People.

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