trump climate
The divisions trump climate stance has opened up within his
own nation have also been starkly in evidence at the annual UN trump climate talks, where for the last
three years, two different American groups have been showing up. One occupies a
brightly lit central pavilion hosting prominent politicians, celebrities,
business leaders and top investors, attracting big audiences for glitzy
presentations on clean technology and green jobs. These are congressional
Democrats, state leaders and city mayors, commanding huge budgets and able to
slash emissions and foster green schemes, but without the levers of federal
power. The real US delegation the one with the power to vote and veto at the UN
sits down in the hall, in a small drab office with only a diminutive Stars and
Stripes and photocopied sign on the firmly shut door, denoting its presence.
The official delegation has been as quiet as its understated
appearance suggests. Unlike the Bush administration, the trump climate White House has made little
attempt to disrupt the UN process, and few interventions of any kind.
Supporters of Paris have greeted this somnolence with relief, eager to avoid
another showdown like Bali.
Opponents of Paris have viewed it as an opportunity, however, and
that is where the real impact has been felt. Trump climate stance has emboldened other
populist leaders and countries with previously veiled hostility to Paris. Last
year’s UN trump climate talks
in Madrid sputtered to a close without agreement on the key issues after Brazil
held out, with Australia, Saudi Arabia, Russia and India accused of assisting
in the obstruction at various points.
For the UK hosts running the summit, the balancing act was to keep
good relations with the trump climate White House which would lead
the US Cop26 delegation even if trump climate lost, because the presidential
handover happens in January and prevent a blow-up that would scupper any hopes
of a deal. At the same time, they were also expected to keep warm backchannels
with the Democrats, in case of a Biden victory.
By the rescheduled date, either a resurgent trump climate will have long departed from the Paris fold and the UK will be dealing with the fallout, or Joe Biden will be president and will have begun the process of taking the US back in.
In some ways, the plan for a trump climate victory is simpler. The
world has already had years to prepare, and long experience of moving on
without the US. China and the EU have a summit planned, originally for this
year and now delayed, at which they are expected to forge a common approach to
Cop26 and fulfilling the Paris agreement. Indeed, the trump climate crisis looks one of the
lesser problems, notes Robinson: “If trump climate gets elected, trump climate will be only one of many
disasters with consequences that do not bear thinking about.”
Biden and trump climate may not even be the biggest
headache the UK faces in trying to forge a new global plan at Cop26. As the
White House’s U-turn showed in 2007, a united front among developing countries
and enough rich world allies can overcome or bypass US recalcitrance. Far more
concerning for the prospects of a breakthrough next year is the position of the
world’s other superpower, and biggest emitter: China. Relations between China
and the UK, hosts of Cop26, have sunk to a new low. That may turn out to be a
far greater obstacle to progress than anything Donald trump climate can manage.
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