Paris Agreement Fight Could Push US Out Permanently, Warn Top Obama Officials

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A deal in Poland that draws a hard line between developed and developing countries may be unacceptable to future administrations — Democratic or Republican.

UN climate talks this fortnight could determine whether a post-Trump U.S. president would rejoin the Paris Agreement, according to two former top Obama officials.

At discussions in Katowice, Poland, almost 200 countries will try to agree the Paris Agreement “rulebook.” That should lay out how countries will enact the accord, for example how they report their efforts to fight climate change. But as talks began on Sunday, thousands of points of disagreement remained.

Todd Stern and Sue Biniaz, the lead climate envoy and lawyer in Barack Obama’s state department and key scribes and agents of the 2015 Paris deal, spoke to Climate Home News.

Biniaz said: “Some countries, and I’m not exactly sure exactly who’s in this camp, are, I would say ignoring the language of the Paris Agreement and basically saying there should be two different sets of guidelines: one for developed countries and one for developing countries. I would say that that’s just completely inconsistent with what was agreed in Paris.”

A hard divide between developed and developing nations would allow China, India, other major polluters and many middle income countries to slip into a category where the Paris Agreement has softer requirements.

That will be resisted by the U.S. administration under Donald Trump. But yoking China to the same climate regime as the U.S. has been a bipartisan policy in Washington for decades. Therefore, it could also be unacceptable to a future Democratic president, according to Biniaz and Stern, who have left the U.S. government and are now working in Washington, D.C., think tanks, but continue to participate informally at UN talks.

Sue Biniaz and Todd Stern at COP23 in Bonn, Germany.
Sue Biniaz and Todd Stern at the non-federally sanctioned U.S. Climate Action Center at the 2017 UN climate talks in Bonn, Germany. Credit: Ashley Braun, DeSmog

I would hope, just as a person who thinks that the Paris Agreement is a good thing for the United States to be a part of, that whatever rulebook comes out would be considered acceptable to a future administration that would want to rejoin the agreement,” Biniaz said.

Insiders told Climate Home News China was driving the push by recruiting proxies to suggest amendments to the text. Biniaz was also the top lawyer for the Bush administration when it pulled back from the Kyoto Protocol because it did not place restrictions on China and other big emerging polluters.

I think that if the balance were off — like it went backwards on issues of differentiation — that future administrations might look at that and say ‘that’s not really something we want to be a part of,’” she said.

Stern said he could not predict the policy of any future Democratic leader. But, he said, “I’m a Democrat and I come at climate change from that perspective.”

Stern, who is now a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, has raised concerns about placing a “firewall” between rich and poor countries.

I think [people] probably can draw the conclusion [that] if Stern’s got a big problem with it, that might lead us to think that some future administration would,” he said.

Both Stern and Biniaz said the Paris Agreement already allowed for “flexibility” for developing countries when they could not meet the requirements of the common set of rules. Stern said this “supple” means of differentiation was one of the major advances of the Paris deal.

Stern added, it was “not a very appealing argument” to ask other countries to push for a certain outcome in Katowice in order to keep the door open for a future president, “because the U.S. has walked away … in a very disruptive and aggravating manner in the eyes of virtually any other country you can think of.”

Manuel Pulgar Vidal, who was the president of the 2014 Lima climate talks and is now climate lead at WWF, said trying to predict the U.S. position under a future president was inadvisable. “If we are going to take decisions based on the political context, we could fail,” he said.

The binary option can be seen throughout the hundreds of pages presented to diplomats before the talks. For example, the section on transparent reporting of emissions cuts contains three options: common rules, partially different rules and completely separate sets of guidelines for rich and poor.

Some observers Climate Home News spoke to believed efforts to push a binary system were tactical, and were likely to soften at these talks.

Biniaz said she was “pretty confident it’s not going to come out that way”. Pulgar Vidal was less certain, adding that it was “the most contentious topic” at the talks.

The issue is likely to result in significant tensions between the U.S. and Chinese delegations at the talks in Katowice. A state department spokesperson said that although the Trump administration expected to withdraw from the deal in 2020, it continued to participate in discussions to “ensure a level playing field.” In November, a U.S. state department team travelled to Beijing to try and find common ground ahead of the talks.

Li Shuo, a policy advisor for Greenpeace East Asia, said China had to walk a fine line, because a collapse in the talks would add to the list of issues over which China is currently at odds with the West.

It’s not in China’s interest to have another battlefield, a battlefield where China has actually performed quite well over the past years,” he said. The Chinese government did not respond to questions.

China will be represented in Katowice by its long time climate lead and former minister Xie Zhenhua. The U.S. delegation will be led by Judith Garber a deputy assistant secretary, three rungs below ministerial level. Li said Xie’s efforts to move forward on political questions had been “frustrated” by the Trump administration’s lack of a political lead on climate change.

Stern, who since he left the government has held informal meetings with Xie, said there was a danger of the talks going off track because the U.S. was “not engaged at a political level.”

It’s not like there are other people at a senior level expressing the kind of views that I would want to get across, because that’s not the case. So yes, I decided to get more involved myself but for the sake of the agreement, not on behalf of the United States,” he said.

This article originally appeared on Climate Home News.

Main image: Todd Stern and Sue Biniaz were at the top of the U.S. state department climate team under Obama. Credit: Department of State/IISD

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