BusinessMirror

US climate envoy in Japan to push efforts to cut emissions

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TOKYO—US climate envoy John Kerry met in Tokyo on Tuesday with Japan’s top diplomat to push efforts to fight climate change ahead of a United Nations conference in November.

Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi highlighte­d what he said was the importance of getting other major carbon emitters, especially China, to cooperate.

“China is the world’s biggest carbon emitter and the number two economy as well, and it is extremely important that we encourage China to firmly fulfill its responsibi­lity to match its place,” Motegi told reporters after his meeting with Kerry.

Motegi added that he hoped Japan and the United States would lead global decarboniz­ing efforts at the UN conference to be held in Glasgow in late November, known as COP26, and beyond.

Kerry was also scheduled to meet with Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, Environmen­t Minister Shinjiro Koizumi, as well as Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Hiroshi Kajiyama.

Kerry arrived in Japan on Monday and will fly out on Tuesday evening to China for more climate talks—his second trip to the country under President Joe Biden’s administra­tion.

Kerry has called on global leaders to work together and accelerate actions needed to curb rising temperatur­es to no more than 1.5 degrees Celsius over pre-industrial levels. He urged China to join the US in urgently cutting carbon emissions.

China is the world’s top carbon emitter, followed by the United States. Japan is fifth.

Many countries have pledged to eliminate net carbon emissions by 2050. Japan has promised to strive to reduce its emissions by 46 percentfro­m 2012 levels, up from an earlier target of 26 percent, to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050. China has also set a goal to reach carbon neutrality by 2060.

Suga has said Japan will try to push the reduction as high as 50 percentto be in line with the European Union.

In order to achieve that target, Japan’s Environmen­t Ministry is seeking a significan­t budget increase to promote renewable energy and decarboniz­ing programs. The Trade and Industry Ministry plans to use large subsidies to promote electric vehicles and wind power generation, according to a draft budget proposal for 2022.

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