Yahoo – AFP,
Jérôme Cartillier in Yangon and Jitendra Joshi in Brisbane
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Barack
Obama speaks during the opening session of the Climate Change Summit at
the United Nations in New York on September 23, 2014 (AFP Photo/Timothy A. Clary) |
Brisbane
(Australia) (AFP) - US President Barack Obama will pledge $3 billion to a UN
fund aimed at mitigating the effects of climate change in the world's poorest
countries, a US official said Friday.
"It is
in our national interest to helping vulnerable countries to build resilience to
climate change," the administration official said as Obama headed to a G20
summit in Australia.
Obama was
en route to Brisbane after visiting Myanmar and China, where on Wednesday he
and President Xi Jinping announced ambitious targets on greenhouse gas
emissions as part of a pact designed to breathe new life into attempts to
replace the international Kyoto treaty.
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Barack
Obama takes part in a civil
society roundtable discussion at the US
Embassy in
Yangon on November 14,
2014 (AFP Photo/Mandel Ngan)
|
The US
president's renewed focus on climate change threatens to upend Australia's
stated focus of keeping the G20 summit confined to economic issues.
Australian
Prime Minister Tony Abbott is a sceptic about man-made global warming and he
was forced to deny Friday that the revived debate about the issue this week
risks leaving him isolated.
And Obama
himself must yet get Congress to agree to the contribution, which could be a
tough sell after the Republicans regained control of both houses in this
month's mid-term elections.
The
UN-backed GCF is designed to enlist private-sector money on top of government
donations, and so help poorer countries to invest in environmentally friendly
technologies and build up their defences against rising sea levels and less
predictable weather patterns.
The US
official said Obama's $3 billion pledge would also help make the world safer.
"More
resilient communities are less likely to descend into instability or conflict
in the aftermath of extreme climate events, needing more costly interventions
to restore stability and rebuild," the official said.
Abbott in
the cold?
At the G20
summit, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is expected to say that Japan will give up to
$1.5 billion to the Green Climate Fund, Kyodo News agency reported Friday.
Christiana
Figueres, the head of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC),
has called for an initial capitalisation of $10 billion by the end of the year.
France and Germany
have already pledged to contribute $1 billion each.
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Tony Abbott
(left) shakes hands with Indonesia's
President Joko Widodo on the sidelines of
the G20 Summit in Brisbane on November 14,
2014 (AFP Photo/Andrew Taylor)
|
China set a
target for its greenhouse gas output to peak "around 2030", the first
time Beijing had agreed to an approximate target date for beginning to reverse
its emissions trend.
Obama set a
goal for the US to cut such emissions by 26-28 percent from 2005 levels by
2025.
The Sino-US
pact was hailed by climate scientists as the jolt in the arm that post-Kyoto
negotiations need heading into a major meeting in Paris next year.
But US
Republicans denounced it for having the potential to kill economic growth and
job creation.
And Abbott,
a conservative who like many Republicans disdains the science behind climate
change, has withdrawn a "carbon tax" that his Labor predecessor had
introduced as a way of combatting industrial emissions.
On Friday
Abbott said the tax had been "damaging our economy without helping the
environment".
Instead, he
said his government was taking "strong action" of its own by
committing to reduce emissions by five percent on 2000 levels by 2020.
The US
official, however, urged "all major countries" to contribute to the
GCF.
"As
the US and China showed earlier this week, we need to reach across traditional
divides to tackle climate change, and that includes providing support to the
poorest and most vulnerable."
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