Home / China / World

Gap on climate unveiled at G7 meeting

China Daily | Updated: 2017-06-14 07:32

Gap on climate unveiled at G7 meeting

French Environment expert Virginie Dumoulin (left) and Italian Environment Minister Gian Luca Galletti attend a news conference at the G7 meeting in Bologna, Italy, on Monday.Giorgio Benvenuti / Ansa Via Associated Press

BOLOGNA, Italy - US allies in the G7 have said that action to contain devastating climate change was irreversible and could even be accelerated, despite Donald Trump's decision to pull the United States out of the Paris accord.

A two-day meeting of environment chiefs from the club of industrialized democracies ended with the US again disassociating itself from a statement underlining the importance of implementing the 2015 Paris deal on curbing carbon emissions.

Trump's representative at the meeting, Scott Pruitt, the head of the Environment Protection Agency, was unrepentant, insisting US action spoke louder than words.

"Respective of the importance to engage with long-standing allies and key international partners, we approached the climate discussions head on from a position of strength and clarity," he said.

"We are resetting the dialogue to say Paris is not the only way forward to making progress. ... (Paris) is not the only mechanism by which environmental stewardship can be demonstrated," added Pruitt, who had left the meeting on Sunday to attend Trump's first full cabinet meeting on Monday.

'Poison'

French minister Nicolas Hulot said US allies were determined not to let Trump's controversial climate stance "poison" cooperation on other ecological issues, and said the world could work around the US position, even though it is a damaging one.

"The only legal framework for climate negotiations is the accord and objectives fixed in Paris and there is no doubt that they are irreversible," said Hulot, a former TV star and a long-standing environmental campaigner who was persuaded to enter government by new French President Emmanuel Macron.

Hulot said US commitments on other environmental issues, notably cleaning up the world's plastic-choked oceans, were not in doubt, and the commitment of industry players to green technologies and renewable energy would not be affected by Trump's position.

While acknowledging that Trump's ending of US financing for developing countries affected by climate change was an important setback, he said France and other countries were looking at ways of compensating through multilateral development banks.

"The transition to a low-carbon economy is on the march and it has an irreversible dynamic, including in the US," he said in comments that played on the name of Macron's Republique en Marche (Republic on the Move) party.

"Now we want to try and accelerate rather than hit the brakes," Hulot added, promising to step up carbon-curbing overhauls at a national and European level.

The meeting's divided conclusion mirrored events at a meeting of G7 leaders attended by Trump in Sicily last month which sparked a rift with Germany in particular.

Hulot added: "Symbolically it is important that the US remains in an environmentalist dynamic, even if it wants to maintain a degree of latitude on climate change and prefers a bilateral approach to a multilateral one on that issue."

Afp - Xinhua

Editor's picks