US President Donald Trump has made his expected announcement pulling his country out of the Paris climate agreement. He also said the US would, “begin negotiations to re-enter either the Paris accord or a really entirely new transaction on terms that are fair to the United States, its businesses, its workers, its people, its taxpayers.” The second part of the statement has graver implications for the world. This was exactly the way the Kyoto Protocol (KP) was effectively killed.
It would be a grave injustice if the US pulled out of the Paris agreement and stayed out. It would mean that the country that has placed the maximum amount of greenhouse gases in the earth’s atmosphere since the start of the Industrial Age would not have to face any consequences. But staying in the negotiations will have worse consequences for the world. It will mean US delegates will be present in every room where negotiations under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) will go on. If the KP negotiations are anything to go by, they will oppose the Paris agreement clause by clause. Using the UN rule that every decision must be unanimous, they will effectively kill the agreement.
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Trump said he could not “support a deal that punishes the United States – which is what it does – the world’s leader in environmental protection, while imposing no meaningful obligations on the world’s leading polluters. For example, under the agreement, China will be able to increase these emissions by a staggering number of years – 13. They can do whatever they want for 13 years. Not us. India makes its participation contingent on receiving billions and billions and billions of dollars in foreign aid from developed countries. China will be allowed to build hundreds of additional coal plants. So, we can’t build the plants, but they can, according to this agreement. India will be allowed to double its coal production by 2020. Think of it: India can double their coal production. We’re supposed to get rid of ours. Even Europe is allowed to continue construction of coal plants.”
The world’s leading polluters?
What Trump did not say that the countries he described as “the world’s leading polluters” had per capita carbon footprints a fraction of that of the US – China less than one third, and India less than one eighth. Nor did he mention that though China has committed to peaking its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 2030, it is likely to reach this target earlier, a move likely to be accelerated as Chinese Premier Li Keqiang reaches a major climate deal with the European Union a day after Trump’s pronouncement.
As for India, as part of the Paris agreement it pledged to control its emissions through domestic efforts, and said it could do more if it received money from developed countries. India does have a declared goal of producing 110 GW more of electricity by 2022 through coal-fired power plants, but rapid advances in solar and wind powered electricity generation is likely to reduce this figure significantly. India has committed to produce 175 GW from renewable energy sources within the same timeframe. As India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi toured four European capitals this week, he repeatedly said India would stay within the Paris agreement and continue to fulfil its obligations under it.
Global isolation
Many critics of Trump’s action pointed out that the pull-out placed the US in the same group as Syria and Nicaragua as countries that were not part of the Paris agreement. What few pointed out was that Nicaragua had not signed up because it found the agreement too weak to combat climate change. That point of view has been endorsed by analysts who calculate that the pledges made by 194 countries will still fail to keep average global temperature rise to within two degrees Celsius by 2100 – as the agreement aims to do. Climate change is already affecting farm production worldwide, making floods, droughts and storms more frequent and more severe, and raising the sea level. Last year was the warmest since record keeping began in the 19th century.
See: Roundtable: How will countries respond if the US withdraws from Paris?
Global condemnation of Trump’s action was led by former US President Barack Obama, who said, “The nations that remain in the Paris agreement will be the nations that reap the benefits in jobs and industries created. I believe the United States of America should be at the front of the pack.” By current indications, many of the 50 states in the US will continue down the clean energy path they started when Obama was president. So, despite the actions of the federal Trump administration, the pull-out may not lead to reopening of coal mines and thermal power plants.
The blow to climate research
What it will hit is climate research in the US, till now largely funded through federal grants. This is largely under the control of the US Environment Protection Agency, led by Scott Pruitt, who said during his Senate confirmation hearing that satellite data show a “levelling off” of global warming. This claim has just been tested and found false in a study carried out by scientists at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Washington in Seattle, and science research company Remote Sensing Systems. The budget that covers the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory faces a proposed 70% cut in the budget released last week by the White House.
See: Throttling climate science, Trump style
Under the Paris agreement, the US commitment is to reduce its GHG emissions by 26-28% from 2005 levels by 2025. Currently, the US is responsible for 15% of global GHG emissions, China for 30%, the EU for 10% and India for 6%.
By pulling the US out of the Paris agreement but keeping it within the UNFCCC, President Trump has started a process that will take over three years to complete, under the clauses of the agreement. That means this will become a major topic of debate during the 2020 US presidential campaign. Trump is clearly looking at his support base rather than global leaders, some of whom were scathing in their condemnation.
Explaining to Trump “in clear, simple sentences”
European Commission President Jean Claude-Juncker said Trump doesn’t “comprehensively understand” the terms of the accord, though European leaders tried to explain the process for withdrawing to him “in clear, simple sentences” during summit meetings last week. “It looks like that attempt failed.”
In more measured language, the UNFCCC secretariat was equally firm, saying, “The Paris Agreement remains a historic treaty signed by 194 and ratified by 147 countries. Therefore, it cannot be renegotiated based on the request of a single Party (country).”
Indian civil society responds
Green groups in India were strong in their criticism. New Delhi-based think tank Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) said, “Without the substantial emission cuts that the US is responsible for, the objectives of the Paris agreement to restrict global warming to 2 degrees Celsius cannot be met.” Sunita Narain, the head of CSE, said that even in the past, “To accommodate US interests, countries have worked towards making climate agreements weak. The Kyoto Protocol had weak targets. Likewise, to bring back the US under the UN climate framework, the Paris Agreement was made a voluntary, bottom-up decentralised regime with no emission reduction commitments for countries and no punitive measures if countries failed to meet their targets… The pulling out of the Paris agreement means that the US will not fulfil its already weak commitments.”
She also criticised the consequent shutting off of US funding. “This would mean that funding to the Green Climate Fund, meant to help developing countries to address climate change, would suffer tremendously… The US cannot continue to keep the world hostage. Pulling out of the Paris agreement would mean that with 5% of the world population, the US, will continue to jeopardise the remaining 95%. Countries need to hold the US accountable for decisions that have a global impact.”
Sreedhar Ramamurthi of Environics India said, “Thanks to historic US pollution, we are already suffering the consequences of a rapidly warming world with droughts, fires, and floods wreaking havoc with livelihoods and lives, even displacing whole communities. Trump wants to add to that historic pollution and condemn present and future generations in the global south to further suffering and death. We cannot allow this, there must be forceful political, legal, and economic consequences levied against the US.”
Criticism from within the US
Even within the US, many critics of the pull-out used strong language. Michael Brune, head of the largest US green NGO, the Sierra Club, said, “Generations from now, Americans will look back at Donald Trump’s decision to leave the Paris agreement as one of the most ignorant and dangerous actions ever taken by any President… Trump has isolated our country on the world stage, ceding our leadership position and our economic advantage on clean energy to India and China.”
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Susanne Moser of Stanford University said, “Trump supporters voted for an America that is a great place to live, to raise a family, to find meaningful work and see one’s grandchildren have a better future. They did not vote to have floods wash away their dreams, droughts wither their livelihoods, wildfires to make their homes go up in smoke, rising seas inundate their communities and dirty air give their children asthma. Their legitimate needs and hopeful desires are being misused, not to make America great again, but to make America – and everyone else – suffer greatly.” A recent Yale Programme on Climate Change Communication poll found that nearly 70% of Americans, including a majority in all 50 states, support the US participating in the Paris agreement.
Criticism from international NGOs
Climate Action Network (CAN), the umbrella group of hundreds of NGOs that follow climate negotiations, said, “The decision to withdraw the US from the Paris agreement signals that the Trump administration is in total discord with both reality and the rest of the world. Unfortunately, the first to suffer from this injudicious decision is the American people. This action is totally contrary to their best interests: their health, security, food supply, jobs and future. By turning its back on climate action, the Trump administration burdens the American people with rising costs and risks from pollution, environmental degradation and lost opportunities in a low-carbon economy and renewable energy jobs.”
While regretting Trump’s decision, the International Council for Science (ICSU) said, “The science shows that the human influence on the climate system is clearly causing unequivocal warming of the climate system. Changes in extreme weather and climate events, including heat waves and extreme precipitation events will become more intense and frequent. Global mean sea level is rising and threatens coastal communities around the globe, including the United States. Climate change is dangerous, and actions to limit its consequences are urgent. Greenhouse gas emissions threaten the stability of our earth system, which supports life and is vital for our economies.”
Unfortunately despite the uniform negative response to the announcement, it seems unlikely that the Trump administration is likely to change its stance. The leadership void created by the single biggest economy, and the single largest polluter, refusing to take part in climate negotiations will now play out.