President Donald Trump said Monday he would again withdraw the United States from the historic Paris climate accord, dealing a major blow to global efforts to fight global warming and once again distance the United States from its closest allies.
THE announcementwho arrived on the day Mr. Trump was sworn in to a second term, echoes Trump’s actions in 2017when he announced that the United States would abandon the global Paris agreement. President Biden joined later.
As he signed a series of executive actions After his inauguration, Mr. Trump declared: “I am immediately withdrawing from the unjust and unilateral Paris Climate Accords. » He also signed a letter informing the UN of his decision.
The pact aims to limit global warming in the long term to 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit (1.5 degrees Celsius) above pre-industrial levels or, alternatively, keep temperatures at least well below 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit (2 degrees Celsius) above pre-industrial levels. The United States is one of the first in the world carbon polluting nations.
The 2015 Paris Agreement is voluntary and allows countries to set targets to reduce their own greenhouse gas emissions from burning coal, oil and natural gas. These targets are set to become stricter over time, with countries facing a February 2025 deadline for new individual plans.
The outgoing Biden administration last month proposed a plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the United States by more than 60% by 2035.
Laurence Tubiana, CEO of the European Climate Foundation and a key architect of the Paris agreement, called the planned US withdrawal regrettable but said action to slow climate change “is stronger than the politics and policies of any country”.
The global context for Trump’s action is “very different from 2017,” Tubiana said, adding that “there is unstoppable economic momentum behind the global transition, which the United States has driven and led but risks now to lose.”
The International Energy Agency expects the global market for key clean energy technologies to triple to more than $2 trillion by 2035, it said.
“The impacts of the climate crisis are also worsening. terrible forest fires in Los Angeles are the latest reminder that Americans, like everyone else, are affected by worsening climate change,” Tubiana said.
Dr. Rachel Cleetus, policy director and senior economist at UCS’s climate and energy program, called the withdrawal a “travesty.”
“Such a decision clearly disregards scientific realities and shows an administration callously indifferent to the serious consequences of climate change that people in the United States and around the world are experiencing. Withdrawing from the Paris Agreement is an abdication of responsibility and undermines a very comprehensive action that people at home and abroad desperately need,” she said in a statement.
Gina McCarthy, who served as a White House climate adviser under Democratic President Joe Biden, said that if Trump, a Republican, “really wants America to lead the global economy, become energy independent and create good-paying American jobs,” then he must “remain focused on growing our clean energy industry.” Clean technology is lowering energy costs for people across our country.”
The world now stands 2.3 degrees Fahrenheit (1.3 degrees Celsius) above temperatures in the mid-1800s over the long term. Most, but not all, climate monitoring agencies have said temperatures Global temperatures exceeded 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit last year, and all declared it the hottest year on record.
Without deeper reductions in the coming years, the world is on track to see temperatures rise by more than 3 degrees Celsius, according to an October study. UN reportwho warned that such an outcome “would have debilitating consequences for people, the planet and economies.”
The process of withdrawing from the Paris agreement takes a year. Trump’s previous withdrawal took effect the day after the 2020 presidential election, which he lost to Biden.
While the first withdrawal led by Trump the historic UN agreement – adopted by 196 countries – shocked and angered nations around the world, “no country followed the United States,” said Alden Meyer, a longtime analyst of climate negotiations at the European think tank E3G.
Instead, other countries have renewed their commitment to slowing climate change, alongside investors, businesses, governors, mayors and others in the United States, Meyer and others said experts.
They nevertheless lamented the loss of American leadership in global efforts to slow climate change, even as the world is on the verge of another year of record heat and has gone from drought to hurricane to hurricane. floods and forest fires.
“It is clear that America will not play a major role in solving the climate crisis, the greatest dilemma humanity has ever faced,” said climate activist and writer Bill McKibben. “For the next few years, the best we can hope for is that Washington does not succeed in destroying the efforts of others.”
About half of Americans “somewhat” or “strongly” oppose U.S. action to withdraw from the climate agreement, and even Republicans are not overwhelmingly in favor, according to a survey from the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. Only about 2 in 10 American adults “somewhat” or “strongly” favor withdrawing from the Paris agreement, while about a quarter are neutral.
Much of the opposition to the US withdrawal comes from Democrats, but Republicans also show some ambivalence. Just under half of Republicans favor withdrawing from the climate agreement, while about two in ten are opposed.
A few years ago, China overtook the United States to become the world’s largest annual carbon dioxide emitter. The United States – the second largest annual carbon polluter – released 4.9 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide into the air in 2023, an 11% drop from a decade earlier, according to scientists who track emissions for the Global Carbon Project.
But carbon dioxide persists in the atmosphere for centuries, which is why the United States has released more of the heat-trapping gases that are in the air today than any other country. The United States is responsible for nearly 22 percent of the carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere since 1950, according to the Global Carbon Project.
While global efforts to combat climate change continued during Trump’s first term, many experts fear that a second Trump term could be more damaging, with the United States further withdrawing from climate efforts, which which could paralyze the efforts of future presidents. With Trump, who has rejected climate change, at the helm of the world’s largest economy, these experts fear that other countries, particularly China, could use him as an excuse to relax their own efforts to reduce carbon emissions .
Simon Stiell, the UN’s executive secretary on climate change, raised hopes that the United States would continue to benefit from the global clean energy boom.
“Ignoring it only sends all this immense wealth to competing economies, while climate disasters like droughts, wildfires and superstorms keep getting worse,” Stiell said. “The door remains open to the Paris Agreement and we welcome the constructive engagement of all countries.”