At the end of the APEC
trade summit in China, U.S. President Barack Obama announced a climate change
agreement with Chinese President Xi Jinping that would cut both countries'
greenhouse gas emissions by close to a third over the next two decades.
Under the deal, the United States would cut its carbon emissions between 26-28% -- from levels established in 2005 -- by 2025. China would peak its carbon emissions no later than 2030 and would also increase the use of non-fossil fuels to 20% by 2030.
"As the world's two largest economies, energy consumers and
emitters of greenhouse gases, we have a special responsibility to lead the
global effort against climate change," Obama said Wednesday in a joint
press conference with Xi.
Obama said he hopes the announcement will spur other nations to
tackle climate change "We hope to encourage all major economies to
be ambitious -- all countries, developing and developed -- to work across some
of the old divides, so we can conclude a strong global
A senior administration official calls the goals both
"ambitious and achievable," but also acknowledged that U.S. domestic
politics could put a damper on the announcement. Saying "leading climate
deniers" in the GOP might try to stop the initiative, the official hinted
the President may act alone if necessary.
"Congress may try to stop us, but we believe that with
control of Congress changing hands we can proceed with the authority we already
have." The official added, "This is really the crusade of a narrow
group of people who are politically motivated and have made this a cause
celebre, but we believe we will be successful."
The administration hopes to sell the plan back home by touting the
anticipated savings on energy costs. "Consumers and businesses will save
literally billions of dollars" a senior administration official said. The
plan offers initiatives and incentives to develop more solar and wind power
across both countries, the official said.
Another official said the agreement "won't all fall together
in five minutes," but hopes this will demonstrate to other nations that
working together to reduce carbon emissions would prove that "we can work
together to enhance deployment of sustainable clean technologies."
The White House said the announcement marks the first time China
has agreed to cut its carbon emissions, and said the Chinese are calling for
"an energy revolution" that would include a broad economic reform
program that would address air pollution.
China has agreed to provide an "additional 800-1,000
gigawatts of nuclear, wind, solar and other zero emission generation capacity
by 2030, more than all the coal-fired power plants that exist in China today
and close to total current electricity generation capacity in
Another senior administration official said that historically, the United States and China have often been seen as antagonists, so this "should send a powerful message," and "will usher in a new day, where the U.S. and China can work as partners."During Obama's visit, the Chinese government closed factories and gave employees time off to reduce car traffic and, ultimately, emissions in Beijing. The reduction of smog and the appearance of blue skies was noted by media throughout the APEC Summit.
On top of historic climate change agreement, Obama and Xi also
agreed on the importance of cybersecurity, the denuclearization of the Korean
peninsula, strengthening military relations and increasing trade.
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