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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Via AP news wire

World leaders applaud US formal return to Paris climate pact

Photograph: ASSOCIATED PRESS

The United States has officially returned to the Paris Agreement, just 107 days after it left as President Joe Biden fulfils his promise to reverse the withdrawal ordered by his immediate predecessor, Donald Trump.

The Paris Agreement, signed by 192 countries, aims to hold global heating at an increasingly ambitious 1.5C above pre-industrial levels by cutting greenhouse gas emissions, and preventing catastrophic climate breakdown.

On his first day in office last month, President Biden rejoined the multilateral deal, starting a 30-day bureaucratic process. 

It was one of a sweep of executive orders to tackle the climate crisis and among many U-turns on policies set by Trump. The US had officially exited the Paris Agreement the day after the presidential election in November.

Mr Biden put tackling the climate crisis at the center of his election pitch, dubbing it an “existential” threat.

“A cry for survival comes from the planet itself,” the president said in his inaugural address. “A cry that can’t be any more desperate or any more clear now.”

Experts have said that international efforts to remain even well below 2C would struggle without the US, the world’s second largest emitter after China, being on board.

Climate scientists warn there is likely less than a decade left to make the sweeping changes needed particularly in energy, transportation, manufacturing and agriculture, as the world has already warmed by around 1.2C since pre-industrial times.

Now comes the hard part: the US is soon expected to produce an updated “Nationally Determined Contribution” - each nation’s pledge on how much they will commit to reduce emissions. Former president Obama’s pledge for 2025 is out of date (and Mr Trump ignored it entirely).

The new figure is expected before Mr Biden hosts a climate summit for world leaders on Earth Day, April 22. At the event, the US leader hopes to convince other major emitters to also up the ante and begin turning the tide on the global emissions trajectory.

Mr Biden has promised the US will be at net-zero emissions no later than 2050.

His climate envoy, John Kerry, has also said that the US will make good on its contributions to the Green Climate Fund for poorer nations, some of which are already bearing the brunt of the climate crisis. Mr Trump had blocked funding during his term.

Laurence Tubiana, CEO of the European Climate Foundation (ECF) said: “It’s good to have the US back in the Paris Agreement, but sadly we have no time to celebrate. The climate crisis is deepening and this is the year we need all major polluters to step up and deliver stronger plans to deliver a safe, clean and prosperous future for everyone.

“The US needs to come to COP26 with a strong commitment: the science tells us this means a target of at least 50 per cent GHG cuts on 2005 levels by 2030, ideally more.”

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