Yahoo – AFP,
Jerome Cartillier, 12 Nov 2014
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US
President Barack Obama (L) and China's President Xi Jinping arrive for a
press
conference at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on November 12, 2014
(AFP
Photo/Mandel Ngan)
|
Beijing
(AFP) - The United States and China on Wednesday announced an action plan on
greenhouse emissions as part of a "historic" pact that was acclaimed
by climate scientists but denounced by US Republicans as a job-killer.
At a
Beijing summit, the leaders of the world's two biggest polluters put their
stamp on attempts to breathe new life into action against global warming ahead
of international talks in Paris next year.
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A woman and
child wear masks on a
polluted day in Beijing on October 20,
2014 (AFP
Photo/Greg Baker)
|
Chinese
President Xi Jinping said: "We agreed to make sure that international climate
change negotiations will reach an agreement in Paris."
Attempts to
deal with climate change, which scientists warn is approaching a potentially
catastrophic point of no return, have long been stymied by the unwillingness of
the United States and China to work together on the problem.
But China
set a target for its greenhouse gas output to peak "around 2030",
which Obama commended as an effort to "slow, peak and reverse the
course" of its emissions.
And Obama,
who faces scepticism as well as outright denial about climate change in the US
Congress, set a goal for the United States to cut its own emissions of
greenhouse gases by 26-28 percent from 2005 levels by 2025.
"We
have a special responsibility to lead the worldwide effort against climate
change," Obama said at a joint news conference with Xi.
"We
hope to encourage all economies to be more ambitious," he added.
China and
the US, which together produce around 45 percent of the world's carbon dioxide,
will be key to ensuring a global deal on reducing emissions after 2020 is
reached next year.
'A new
day'
The two
countries have long been at loggerheads over global targets, with each saying
the other should bear more responsibility for cutting emissions of gases blamed
for heating up the atmosphere.
But after
the 2009 Copenhagen Summit nearly ended in fiasco, salvaged only by a
last-minute deal brokered by Obama and China's then premier, Washington and
Beijing have started to move closer towards agreement.
The World
Resources Institute, a US-based environmental group, hailed the Obama-Xi pact
as a breakthrough.
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Cows graze
in the shadow of the coal-fired Chalk Point Generating Station,
on May 29, 2014
in Benedict, Maryland, United States (AFP Photo/Mark Wilson)
|
"It’s
a new day to have the leaders of the US and China stand shoulder-to-shoulder
and make significant commitments to curb their country's emissions," the
institute's president Andrew Steer said in a statement.
"They
have both clearly acknowledged the mounting threat of climate change and the
urgency of action," he said.
But while
it was the first time China agreed to a target date for emissions to peak --
officials have previously only spoken of doing so "as soon as
possible" -- the commitment was qualified, leaving considerable room for
manoeuvre.
China has
trumpeted its efforts to reduce dependence on coal and oil in the past, and is
the world's largest hydropower producer, with a growing nuclear sector.
But
economic growth remains a vitally important priority and has seen demand for
energy soar.
Much of
Obama's action on climate change meanwhile has been done with executive orders
rather than cooperation from an often confrontational legislature.
The
deadline for Obama's new pledge is in more than a decade's time but he only has
two years left in his presidency. He faces a Congress now set to be controlled
by opposition Republicans in both houses after this month's mid-term elections,
which will make passing environmental legislation even more difficult.
In an early
portent of the battles to come, the US Senate's new Republican leader was quick
to slam Obama's proposed greenhouse gas reductions.
“This
unrealistic plan, that the president would dump on his successor, would ensure
higher utility rates and far fewer jobs," Senator Mitch McConnell said.
The
European Union pledged last month to reduce emissions by at least 40 percent by
2030 compared with 1990 levels.
But efforts
to make meaningful progress on climate change will by stymied unless the US
sets "a concrete and ambitious" goal to reduce its greenhouse gas
emissions, Connie Hedegaard, EU climate commissioner, said in October.
The EU
accounts for 11 percent of the world's greenhouse gas emissions, compared to 16
percent for the United States and 29 percent for China.
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