In climate talks, it
has always been America First
Donald Trump, considering a US withdrawal from the Paris Agreement, is not the first American president to test international partners' patience by challenging a climate deal that took years to negotiate.
Donald Trump, considering a US withdrawal from the Paris Agreement, is not the first American president to test international partners' patience by challenging a climate deal that took years to negotiate.
Here
is a brief history of America's chequered involvement in the two-decade-old
process that yielded the 2015 Paris accord endorsed by 196 nations -- the first
universal pact on curbing global warming.
-
Kyoto -
Right
from the start, when the UN climate convention was signed in Rio de Janeiro in
1992, the United States resisted any notion of greenhouse gas limits being
imposed on countries "top-down".
Instead,
Washington has consistently insisted on national sovereignty when it comes to
determining which gases to reduce, how, by how much, and by when.
In
1997, the US joined most of the rest of the world in agreeing to the Kyoto
Protocol, which listed binding emissions-curbing targets only for rich nations
-- those most responsible for carbon pollution blamed for global warming.
The
US agreed to the deal after extracting several concessions from negotiating
partners.
Bill
Clinton's vice president Al Gore signed the treaty on America's behalf in 1998,
but the Democrat administration could never muster the two-thirds support
required from the Senate to officially ratify it.
And
when Clinton was replaced by oilman George W. Bush in 2001, the writing was on
the wall.
Bush
-- like his father before him -- objected to a pact he said gave developing
countries free rein to burn fossil fuels and grow their economies while rich
nations' hands were tied by emissions restrictions.
The
pact entered into force without America in 2005 after Russia signed on, tipping
the agreement over the legal threshold of 55 ratifiers required.
Canada
later withdrew from the deal, and New Zealand, Japan and Russia failed to take
on a second round of carbon-cutting pledges.
-
Copenhagen -
In
2009 the world's nations gathered with the task of replacing the Kyoto Protocol
with a new pact requiring action from all countries -- including China and
India, the world's first- and third-biggest carbon polluters, and second-placed
US.
But
talks in the Danish capital ended in near-failure amid bickering between rich
and poor countries over how to share responsibility for cuts.
The
US, with backing from others, insisted that any deal not be termed a
"treaty" that would require Senate ratification, or contain emissions
limits that are binding under international law.
In
the end, the meeting yielded a non-formal "accord", which enshrined
the target of limiting average global warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6
degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-industrial levels, but listed no emissions targets
or cut-off dates.
-
Paris -
The
next deadline, set at talks in Durban in 2011, was for a global deal to be
finalised by 2015.
US
president Barack Obama led with China's Xi Jinping to rally 195 countries
around the common goal.
But
with a Republican-dominated Senate back home, he could do only so much.
The
end product was a compromise: a legally-binding core agreement that sets out
the overarching goals and objectives of limiting warming.
Countries'
intended emissions cuts to this end are listed in a separate non-legally
binding register, and are termed "contributions" rather than
"commitments".
This
allowed Obama to ratify the agreement without Senate approval.
But
it also means there will be no repercussions apart from a diplomatic cold
shoulder for Washington withdrawing from the hard-fought pact and breaking its
pledge to cut emissions by 26-28 percent over 2005 levels by 2025.
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