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U.S. Exits Paris Climate Pact With Election Outcome Uncertain

Published 11/04/2020, 12:59 PM
Updated 11/04/2020, 05:54 PM
© Bloomberg. The Arc de Triomphe in Paris on Nov. 4, 2016. America’s withdrawal prompted concerns that other nations would follow. Photographer: Patrick Kovarik/AFP/Getty Images

(Bloomberg) --

The U.S. has officially become the first nation to quit the Paris climate agreement, even as the outcome of the country’s presidential race remains undetermined.

President Donald Trump, who’s fighting for re-election, moved to withdraw from the landmark environmental accord exactly one year ago, abandoning a global effort to curb carbon emissions and slow global warming. The U.S. exit formally took effect Wednesday, the day after the vote.

The fate of the global climate now rests, in part, on who ends up in the White House. Former Vice President Joe Biden has said he will rejoin the Paris pact immediately if he wins. His clean-energy agenda is one of the most ambitious in the world, and could help significantly lower global emissions.

In contrast, Trump has spent the past four years promoting fossil fuels, rolling back environmental regulations and denigrating climate science. He is likely to spend a second term further hindering efforts to curb carbon emissions.As of 11:30 a.m. New York time Wednesday, Biden had 238 electoral votes while Trump had 213, leaving both shy of the 270 needed to secure immediate victories.

READ MORE: Biden Can Easily Rejoin Paris. The Hard Part Is Everything Else

“The next 10 years are really going to determine the future,” said Alden Meyer, U.S. director for the International Climate Politics Hub.

When President Barack Obama signed the deal five years ago, the U.S. pledged to curb greenhouse gas emissions by 26% to 28% below 2005 levels by 2025. While the U.S. is no longer on track to meet that goal, it’s not too far off. Emissions now are down about 15% after local governments and private industry voluntarily lowered their own emissions, according to Meyer.

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A Biden presidency could get the nation back on track. As the second-largest emitter of greenhouse gases in the world, the U.S. could play an outsized role in lowering global emissions. If it joined all other Group of Seven nations in setting a net-zero carbon goal as Biden has pledged, 63% of the world’s emissions would be covered by government pledges, compared with 51% now, according to Climate Action Tracker.

In a joint statement, Chile, France, Italy, the U.K. and the United Nations said they regretted the U.S. exit but would continue to try to accelerate climate action.“There is no greater responsibility than protecting our planet and people from the threat of climate change. The science is clear that we must urgently scale up action and work together to reduce the impacts of global warming and to ensure a greener, more resilient future for us all. The Paris Agreement provides the right framework to achieve this,” they said. 

RELATED: Green Electric Grid Will Dramatically Speed Up Climate Action

America’s withdrawal initially prompted concerns that other nations would follow suit. Instead, world leaders have stepped up efforts to fight climate change. European Union ministers last month backed a binding 2050 climate neutrality goal. And in the past six weeks, China, Japan and South Korea have all committed to achieving carbon-neutral economies.

“We haven’t see the mass retreat from the Paris Agreement that some were warning of when the president made his plans to exit clear,” said Jesse Bragg, a spokesman for Corporate Accountability, an environmental campaign group.

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The U.S. is exiting the Paris Agreement as soon as it can. Trump announced in 2017 his intention to pull out, but couldn’t start the process until a year ago. Under the terms of the deal signed in 2015 by Obama, nations weren’t allowed to make exit plans until three years after the pact entered into force, on Nov. 4, 2016.

It’s designed to be harder to leave than it is to join. Re-entry would take effect 30 days after Biden notifies the United Nations of his intent in writing. That means the earliest Biden would be able to officially rejoin the deal would be Feb. 19, a month after he takes office.

(Updates with statement from other countries on U.S. withdrawal in ninth paragraph.)

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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