In what can be called as a landmark stride in climate talks, China has agreed to peak carbon emissions by around 2030, with the intention to try to peak early and increase the non-fossil share of all energy to around 20 percent by 2030.
Meanwhile the U.S announced new target to cut net greenhouse gas emissions 26-28 percent below 2005 levels by 2025.
The pledge by the U.S and China, the top two carbon emitting countries in the world, come ahead of the global climate change meet scheduled in Paris late next year.
See how President Obama is building on the progress we’ve made to #ActOnClimate → http://t.co/52GMrkGj51 pic.twitter.com/eJsLwtT3tm
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) November 12, 2014
Soon after the announcement by the two countries, UN issued a statement saying other major economies should follow the path of China and the U.S and announce post-2020 targets as soon as possible, but no later than the first quarter of 2015. The statement is a call to countries like India, Japan and Russia that top the list of polluters. China and India have always been targets in climate talks. The agreement between China and the U.S happens after a prolonged discussion between the two countries.
Get the facts on the U.S. & China’s new commitments to reduce carbon pollution: http://t.co/3Ns7QaNnAr #ActOnClimate pic.twitter.com/p1yL44x4iY
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) November 12, 2014
Meanwhile, critics also say the clauses mentioned in the U.S.-China agreement do not suffice to create a truly game changing climate relationship.
The climate targets in the agreement are referred as “intent,” and they don’t promise to even “agree,” says Ben Adler in Grist.
Adler says, “That may sound a little weak, but it’s necessary. Remember, foreign treaties require approval from a two-thirds supermajority of the U.S. Senate before they can be ratified. There’s no way Senate Republicans would vote for an emission-reduction treaty. But by merely jointly announcing with China their intentions, the Obama administration avoids signing an actual treaty. So the Senate can’t formally stop this agreement.
A statement from Nic Clyde, a senior climate campaigner, Greenpeace Australia-Pacific, said, “Both sides have yet to reach the goal of a truly game-changing climate relationship. There is a clear expectation of more ambition from these two economies whose emissions trajectories define the global response to climate change. Today’s announcements should only be the floor and not the ceiling of enhanced actions.”
Meanwhile, others view the pledges by the two world leaders as dramatic and ambitious because the agreement overwrites Obama’s earlier plans for a smaller cut in emissions, while on the part of China, it is the first sign of consent by China that has always been resisting any move to cap emissions.
Rajani Baburajan
editor@greentechlead.com