Oroville Mercury-Register

US-China tensions threaten global climate change efforts

- By Christina Larson and Ellen Knickmeyer

The world’s hopes for curbing climate change hinge on action by two giant nations whose relations are deteriorat­ing: China and the United States. The two countries both say they are intent on retooling their economies to burn less climatewre­cking coal, oil and gas. But tensions between them threaten their ultimate success.

China and the United States are the world’s No. 1 and No. 2 carbon polluters, respective­ly, pumping out nearly half of the fossil fuel fumes that are warming the planet’s atmosphere.

Need to cooperate

The fast cuts in carbon needed to stave off the worst of climate change are all but impossible unless these countries work together and basically trust each other’s pledges. During the Trump administra­tion, the U. S. used China’s emissions as an excuse not to act, and in the past China pointed to U. S. historical emissions as a reason to resist action.

New details of how quickly China plans to reduce carbon emissions will be revealed Friday when Beijing releases its next Five Year Plan. And in April, President Joe Biden is expected to announce the United States’ own new targets for emissions cuts.

The U.S. and China both have appointed veteran envoys as their global climate negotiator­s, John Kerry and Xie Zhenhua. But while the two senior statesmen worked well together in laying groundwork for the 2015 Paris climate accord, now they face new challenges.

Split widens

U. S.- China climate diplomacy threatens to be overshadow­ed by what the United States sees as Beijing’s menacing policies toward Hong Kong, Taiwan and the South China Sea, conflict over human rights and trade, and U.S. claims of Chinese espionage.

Meanwhile, Chinese officials are upset about restrictio­ns imposed by the Trump administra­tion on

trade, technology, Chinese media and students in the U.S., and the State Department’s declaratio­n this year that atrocities against China’s Muslim minorities are a “genocide.”

Kerry, a secretary of state under President Barack Obama who was brought back to be Biden’s climate envoy, recently told reporters: “Those issues” with China “will never be traded for anything that has to do with climate. That’s not going to happen.” But Kerry also called the climate “a standalone issue” with China, drawing criticism from China and from some human-rights advocates in the U.S.

Can climate talks between the two countries survive their other geopolitic­al battles?

“That’s, I think, the huge question,” said John Podesta, who oversaw the Obama administra­tion’s climate efforts and is close to the Biden administra­tion.

“Can you create a lane where you get cooperatio­n on climate” while more contentiou­s issues are dealt with separately? Podesta asked. “Or do they wind up interferin­g?”

Hope in envoy

Xie Zhenhua may help the odds. With his appointmen­t as climate envoy last month, Xie is reprising the role he held during pivotal U. N. climate conference­s that struck the world’s first major commitment­s on reducing emissions from fossil fuels.

Prior to his appointmen­t, Xie led a research effort at Tsinghua University in Beijing to map ways for China to stop contributi­ng to global warming by midcentury.

His research underpinne­d President Xi Jinping’s surprise pledge in September that China planned to go carbon neutral by 2060 — the first time the country announced a net-zero target.

Joanna Lewis, an expert in China energy and environmen­t at Georgetown University, called Xie “a visionary, and very influentia­l in setting China’s domestic policy targets,” as well as a skilled negotiator.

Xie’s appointmen­t “was a huge overture toward the United States, and particular­ly to John Kerry,” said Angel Hsu, an expert on China and climate change at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

Ambitious goal

Biden has pledged the U.S. will switch to an emissionsf­ree power sector within 14 years, and have an entirely emissions-free economy by 2050. Kerry is also pushing other nations to commit to carbon neutrality by then.

Behind the dry numbers, massive spending on infrastruc­ture and technology is needed to switch to a more energy- efficient economy, running on wind, solar and other cleaner-burning fuels. And Biden has a narrow majority in Congress to push his agenda, with Republican­s, as well as some Democrats, opposing his plans.

Climate scientists say countries need to move fast to avert catastroph­ic temperatur­e rises.

In 2019, coal accounted for 58% of China’s total primary energy consumptio­n, according to the U. S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Special Presidenti­al Envoy for Climate John Kerry speaks during a press briefing at the White House in Washington.
EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Special Presidenti­al Envoy for Climate John Kerry speaks during a press briefing at the White House in Washington.

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