Bonn (AFP)
- Countries launched a coal phase-out initiative Thursday at UN climate talks
in Bonn, offering an antidote to the defence of Earth-warming fossil fuels by
US President Donald Trump's administration.
Spearheaded
by Canada and Britain, the "Powering Past Coal Alliance" commits more
than 20 nations, cities, and regions to weaning themselves off a commodity that
produces 40 percent of the world's electricity -- a major contributor to global
warming caused by greenhouse gas emissions.
The list
includes Angola, Belgium, Finland, France, Italy, the Marshall Islands, the Netherlands,
New Zealand, Portugal, and Mexico, the regions of Ontario, Quebec, and Alberta,
and the city of Vancouver.
The state
of Washington is the sole American signatory.
"This
is another positive signal of the global momentum away from coal, benefiting
the health of the climate, the public and the economy," said Jens Mattias
Clausen of Greenpeace.
"But
it also puts on notice the governments who lag behind on ending coal, or those
who promote it, that the world’s dirtiest fossil fuel has no future."
The Trump
administration insisted Thursday it was "committed" to limiting
greenhouse gas emissions, as long as this does not threaten energy security or
the economy.
"Our
guiding principles are universal access to affordable and reliable energy, and
open, competitive markets that promote efficiency and energy security, not only
for the United States but around the globe," US acting assistant secretary
of state Judith Garber told the conference.
To this
end, it would "support the cleanest, most efficient power generation,
regardless of the source," she said.
Garber was
the most senior US administration representative at the "high-level
segment" of the annual UN climate huddle. Most other countries were
represented by heads of state or ministers.
On Monday,
White House officials drew the ire of observers and delegates in Bonn by
hosting a sideline event defending the continued use of fossil fuels at a forum
whose very purpose is the drawdown of carbon emissions.
Protecting US interests
Trump announced
in June that the United States will withdraw from the climate-rescue Paris
Agreement championed by his predecessor Barack Obama and endorsed by the
world's nations to cheers and champagne in 2015. The rules determine that no
country can exit the pact before November 2020.
Garber said
Washington still intends to withdraw "at the earliest opportunity",
but remained "open to the possibility of rejoining at a later date under
terms more favourable to the American people."
An
Obama-era official who helped deliver the agreement -- a feat that took more
than two decades of tough negotiations -- lashed out Thursday at Trump's
"wrongheaded" decision.
"Climate
change is a huge challenge, we all know that," Todd Stern, who was Obama's
special envoy for climate change, told AFP on the sidelines of the conference
he attended as an observer. He left government in 2016.
"We
are in a... race against time to transform the economy faster than the bad
stuff of climate change. Trying to say it's a hoax, or it doesn't mean
anything, or it's a terrible agreement and the rest of the world is laughing at
us, is just so.. ridiculous," he said -- citing some of Trump's stated
reasons.
The United
States is the world's biggest historical greenhouse gas polluter, and second
only to China for current-day emissions.
The US
presence at the Bonn talks has not been universally welcomed, especially as it
has taken a tough line on a demand from developing countries for a firmer
commitment to climate finance.
Trump has
also renounced an Obama-era promise to deliver $2.5 billion dollars into the
Green Climate Fund.
Many
question why the US is at Bonn at all, given its rejection of the Paris
Agreement.
The State
Department explained Washington wished to "ensure a level playing field
that benefits and protects US interests."
Three
degrees
The Paris
Agreement commits countries to limiting average global warming to under two
degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over Industrial Revolution levels, and
1.5 C if possible, to avert calamitous climate change-induced storms, drought
and sea-level rises.
Nations
submitted voluntary emissions-cutting commitments to bolster the deal, but
scientists say the pledges placed the world on course for warming of 3 C or
more.
Since
Monday last week, bureaucrats have haggled over a Paris Agreement "rule
book", which must be finished next year and will specify how countries
calculate and report their emissions cuts.
Energy and
environment ministers descended on Bonn Wednesday for the final three days,
tasked with resolving tough issues above the pay grade of rank-and-file
negotiators.
"The
Paris Agreement is a global pledge to hand over a healthy planet to future
generations, and now the time has come to show that we will honour this
pledge," European Union climate change commissioner Miguel Canete told
delegates on Thursday.
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