Current:Home > FinanceClimate Envoy John Kerry Seeks Restart to US Emissions Talks With China -NextFrontier Finance
Climate Envoy John Kerry Seeks Restart to US Emissions Talks With China
View
Date:2025-04-14 14:08:23
John Kerry, the Biden administration’s special presidential envoy for climate, has praised China’s efforts at tackling global warming and urged Beijing to resume suspended talks on the issue, even as tensions flare with Washington over the status of Taiwan.
China cut off climate talks with the U.S. this month in protest of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan, putting negotiations between the world’s two largest carbon dioxide emitters in peril.
On climate change, however, Kerry said that China had “generally speaking, outperformed its commitments.”
“They had said they will do X, Y and Z and they have done more,” Kerry told the Financial Times from Athens, where he was on an official visit.
“China is the largest producer of renewables in the world. They happen to also be the largest deployer of renewables in the world,” Kerry said, referring to renewable energy. “China has its own concerns about the climate crisis. But they obviously also have concerns about economic sustainability, economic development.”
China’s military drills around Taiwan have worsened already tense relations with the Biden administration over Beijing’s support of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and trade disputes. Disagreements with the U.S. have reached into the clean-energy sector, after Congress passed a law barring imports of solar panels and components linked to forced labour in China.
Kerry, who served as secretary of state under President Barack Obama, urged Chinese president Xi Jinping to restart climate talks with the U.S., saying that he was “hopeful” that the countries can “get back together” ahead of the U.N.’s November COP27 climate summit in the Egyptian resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.
“The climate crisis is not a bilateral issue, it’s global, and no two countries can make a greater difference by working together than China and the United States,” Kerry said.
“This is the one area that should not be subject to interruption because of other issues that do affect us,” he added. “And I’m not diminishing those other issues one bit, we need to work on them. But I think a good place to begin is by making Sharm el-Sheikh a success by working together.”
Kerry said he and his Chinese counterpart Xie Zhenhua were “solid friends,” but that climate cooperation had been suspended “from the highest level” in China in response to Pelosi’s trip.
The U.S. and China made a rare joint declaration at the U.N.’s COP26 climate summit in Glasgow this past November to announce cooperation on climate change, with the Chinese special envoy describing it as an “existential crisis.”
The U.S.-China statement contained little in the way of new commitments, other than China stating that it would start to address its emissions of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. China did not go as far as to join a U.S.-European Union pact to cut methane emissions by 30 percent by 2030.
China was expected to announce its own ambitious methane reduction plan, and Washington and Beijing were working together to accelerate the phasing out of coal usage and to address deforestation, Kerry said.
China’s coal consumption approached record highs this month as heatwaves and drought strained the power supply, while U.S. government forecasters expect that a fifth of U.S. electricity will be generated by coal this year.
“The whole world is ground zero for climate change,” Kerry said, listing extreme global weather events in recent weeks, including Arctic melting, European wildfires and flooding in Asia. It is “imperative” for global leaders to “move faster and do more faster in order to be able to address the crisis.”
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2022
This story originally appeared in the Aug. 30, 2022 edition of The Financial Times.
Reprinted with permission.
veryGood! (23)
Related
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Is it Time for the World Court to Weigh in on Climate Change?
- Chicago police officer shot in hand, sustains non-life-threatening injury
- Brother of San Francisco mayor gets sentence reduced for role in girlfriend’s 2000 death
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Fox News Reveals New Host Taking Over Tucker Carlson’s Time Slot
- SAG actors are striking but there are still projects they can work on. Here are the rules of the strike.
- Mississippi governor requests federal assistance for tornado damage
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- New Florida Legislation Will Help the State Brace for Rising Sea Levels, but Doesn’t Address Its Underlying Cause
Ranking
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- Let Us Steal You For a Second to Check In With the Stars of The Bachelorette Now
- Battered and Flooded by Increasingly Severe Weather, Kentucky and Tennessee Have a Big Difference in Forecasting
- With Increased Nutrient Pollution in the Chesapeake Bay, Environmentalists Hope a New Law Will Cleanup Wastewater Treatment in Maryland
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- New Florida Legislation Will Help the State Brace for Rising Sea Levels, but Doesn’t Address Its Underlying Cause
- US Forest Service burn started wildfire that nearly reached Los Alamos, New Mexico, agency says
- Jon Hamm Marries Mad Men Costar Anna Osceola in California Wedding
Recommendation
Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
Louisiana university bars a graduate student from teaching after a profane phone call to a lawmaker
A lawsuit picks a bone with Buffalo Wild Wings: Are 'boneless wings' really wings?
Some of Asa Hutchinson's campaign events attract 6 voters. He's still optimistic about his 2024 primary prospects
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
A Big Climate Warning from One of the Gulf of Maine’s Smallest Marine Creatures
Watchdogs Tackle the Murky World of Greenwash
Janet Yellen says the federal government won't bail out Silicon Valley Bank