$3 billion for Global Warming
Hoax Now and $100 billion by 2020
U.S. to Give $3 Billion to
Climate Fund to Help Poor Nations, and Spur Rich Ones by CORAL DAVENPORT and MARK LANDLERNOV. 14, 2014
A climate change accord to be signed in Paris next year would commit major
economies to cutting carbon emissions from sources such as coal-fired power
plants, like this one in Ghent, Ky. Credit Luke Sharrett
for The New York Times
WASHINGTON — President Obama announced on Saturday that the United
States will contribute $3 billion to a new international fund intended to help
the world’s poorest countries address the effects of climate change.
Mr. Obama made
the announcement at a summit meeting of the Group of 20 industrial powers this
weekend in Brisbane, Australia, on the heels of his landmark announcement this
week that the United States and China will jointly commit to
curbing greenhouse gas emissions over the next decade.
The two
announcements, both unveiled at prominent global meetings with world leaders,
highlight Mr. Obama’s intention to use the last two years of his administration
to push forward on climate change policy, which he sees as a cornerstone
of his legacy.
Mr. Obama aims
to be the lead broker of an international climate change accord, to be signed
in Paris next year that would commit all the world’s major economies to
significantly cutting their emissions of planet-warming carbon pollution from
the burning of coal and oil.
“We’re doing
this because it is in our national interest to build resilience in developing
countries to climate change,” said the senior administration official, speaking
on the condition of anonymity to explain the announcement.
“It is a vital
part of establishing momentum” behind the global climate talks in Paris next
year, a second American official said.
But Mr. Obama’s
pledge, spending American tax dollars on foreign aid related to climate change,
is certain to garner further criticism from Republicans, who have already
denounced his domestic climate change policies as “job-killing” regulations.
On Wednesday,
after Mr. Obama announced in China that the United States would cut its
emissions by 26 to 28 percent from 2005 levels by 2025, Speaker John A. Boehner
said, “This announcement is yet another sign that the president intends to
double down on his job-crushing policies no matter how devastating the impact
for America’s heartland and the country as a whole.”
It is not clear
whether Mr. Obama’s $3 billion pledge will come from existing sources of
funding, or whether he will have to ask Congress to appropriate the money.
Since 2010, the Obama administration has spent about $2.5 billion to help poor
countries adapt to climate change and develop clean sources of energy, but
Republicans are certain to push back against additional funding requests linked
to climate change and foreign aid.
The pledge is
directed to the Green Climate Fund, a financial institution created last
year by the United Nations with headquarters in Incheon, South Korea. It comes
ahead of a Nov. 20 climate meeting in Berlin, at which countries have
been asked to make formal commitments to the fund.
In December,
global climate negotiators will gather in Lima, Peru, to begin drafting the
2015 Paris accord.
The American
contribution is meant to spur other countries to make similar pledges.
Christiana Figueres, the executive secretary of the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change, has called for governments to create
an initial fund of about $10 billion.
Even before Mr.
Obama’s pledge, at least 10 countries, including France, Germany and South
Korea, had pledged a total of around $3 billion to the fund. On Thursday, the
Kyodo News Agency reported that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan would
announce a contribution of about $1.5 billion at the Group of 20 meeting. The
American contribution is expected to be the largest.
“The contribution
by the U.S. will have a direct impact on mobilizing contributions from the
other large economies,” said Hela Cheikhrouhou, executive director of the Green
Climate Fund. “The other large economies — Japan, the U.K. — have been watching
to see what the U.S. will do.”
David Waskow,
an expert on climate change negotiations with the World Resources Institute, a
research organization in Washington, said: “This continues the momentum and
really builds on what they did with the announcement in China. I think we’ll
now see a broader set of actors who are willing to make contributions.”
Money, and lots
of it, is viewed as a crucial part of reaching a climate change deal in Paris
in 2015. In particular, the world’s least developed economies insist that the
world’s richest economies — which are also the largest greenhouse gas polluters
— must commit to paying billions of dollars to help the world’s poorest adapt
to the ravages of climate change.
Other nations
are likely to view an American pledge of climate funding as a small down
payment on a long-term commitment to ultimately send tens of billions of
dollars in public aid and private investment related to climate change.
“Finance has
become this zero-sum game. Put money on the table and we’ll talk; if you don’t
put money on the table then we’ll walk,” said Rachel Kyte, vice president for
sustainability for the World Bank, which is closely involved in the climate
funding talks. “It’s an essential component of a deal.”
At a 2009
climate change summit meeting in Copenhagen, Hillary Rodham Clinton, then the
secretary of state, pledged that by 2020 the United States would help mobilize
$100 billion, through a combination of public aid and private investments, to
flow annually from rich countries to help the poor economies deal with climate
change.
Source: New York Times, A version of this article appears in
print on November 15, 2014, on page A5 of the New York edition with the
headline: U.S. to Give $3 Billion to Climate Fund to Help Poor Nations, and
Spur Rich Ones.
Comments
Did Congress appropriate this ? We should have thrown all the bums out. Climate Change is the lipstick the UN put on
the pig, global warming. This is a proven hoax, so why are we still wasting
money on it ? Obama has always worked for the UN against American interests.
Australia formed a 3rd party to throw their bums out last year. The
repealed their carbon tax. Do we have to form a 3rd party to get
some common sense out of DC ? How about
impeachment ?
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
No comments:
Post a Comment