Daily News Brief November 12, 2014 |
Top of the Agenda
United States and China Sign Climate Agreement
U.S. President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping struck an ambitious climate deal (NYT) to cut carbon emissions on Wednesday
after the two leaders met on the sidelines of the APEC summit. Obama
set a new, more aggressive target to reduce emissions, and Xi announced
China's first commitment to stop emissions' growth by 2030. The
agreement by the world's top polluters is likely to inject new momentum (FT) into global climate negotiations, which have stalled since 2009. Washington and Beijing also agreed to cut tariffs (Time) on high-tech goods.
Analysis
"Barack
Obama and Xi Jinping surprised even the closest climate watchers last
night when they jointly announced new emissions-cutting goals for the
United States and China. This is a serious diplomatic breakthrough
after years of unsuccessful efforts to do something big and joint that
goes beyond clean energy cooperation and gets to one of the most
sensitive parts of climate policy," writes CFR's Michael A. Levi.
"This
is also a milestone in the United States-China relationship, the
outcome of a concerted effort that began last year in Beijing, when
State Councilor Yang Jiechi and I started the United States-China
Climate Change Working Group. It was an effort inspired not just by our
shared concern about the impact of climate change, but by our belief
that the world's largest economies, energy consumers and carbon emitters
have a responsibility to lead," writes Secretary of State John Kerry in the New York Times.
"No
progress was going to happen without the world's two biggest polluters,
the US and China. The deal they have struck has the potential to end the stand-off
that doomed efforts to sign a global deal in Copenhagen in 2009. That
coalition of the unwilling is now becoming a coalition of the willing,"
writes Damian Carrington in the Guardian.
U.S.-China Joint Announcement on Climate Change | The White House official release
U.S.-China Joint Announcement on Climate Change | The White House official release
Related: John Kerry: Our Historic Agreement With China on Climate Change - NYTimes.com John Kerry: Our Historic Agreement With China on Climate Change
Related: China’s Environmental Goals Won’t be Hard to Hit - WSJ - WSJ the
goals themselves hewed closely to the economic trajectory Beijing has
charted under existing environmental policies, environmental watchdogs
and analysts said. Under the terms of the announcement by Presidents Xi
Jinping and Barack Obama , China will increase its share of nonfossil
fuels in total energy consumption to around 20% by 2030, and
carbon-dioxide emissions will peak — or start decreasing in annual
absolute volume — around that year. That is roughly in line with the
government’s five-year plan, or broad development blueprint, in 2013,
which set a target for nonfossil fuels to account for 15% of China’s
energy mix by 2020. Such fuels refer to renewable energy like
hydropower, wind and solar energy.
Related: McConnell: US-China deal ‘unrealistic’ | TheHill Senate
Minority Leader [soon to be Majority Leader] Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.)
wasted little time Tuesday night in blasting President Obama’s climate
agreement with China as another costly, unpopular environmental move.
“Our economy can’t take the president’s ideological war on coal that
will increase the squeeze on middle-class families and struggling
miners,” McConnell said in a statement minutes after the White House
announced the bilateral deal.
Related: Politicians and Climate Experts React to U.S.-China Emissions Deal - NYTimes.com Al
Gore: Today’s joint announcement by President Barack Obama and Chinese
President Xi Jinping to reduce their nations’ carbon emissions is a
major step forward in the global effort to solve the climate crisis.
Much more will be required — including a global agreement from all
nations — but these actions demonstrate a serious commitment by the top
two global polluters.
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