China couldn’t have invented global warming as
a hoax to harm US competitiveness because it was Donald Trump’s
Republican predecessors who started climate negotiations in the 1980s,
China’s Vice Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin said.
US Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush
supported the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in initiating
global warming talks even before China knew that negotiations to cut
pollution were starting, Liu told reporters at United Nations talks on
Wednesday in Marrakech, Morocco.
Ministers and government officials from almost
200 countries gathered in Marrakech this week are awaiting a decision by
President-elect Trump on whether he’ll pull the US out of the Paris
Agreement to tackle climate change. The tycoon said the concept of
global warming “was created by and for the Chinese in order to make US
manufacturing non-competitive.” China’s envoy rejected that view.
“If you look at the history of climate change negotiations, actually it was initiated by the IPCC with the support of the Republicans during the Reagan and senior Bush administration during the late 1980s,” Liu told reporters during an hour-long briefing.
While Reagan died in 2004, George Schulz, who
served as his secretary of state, has become one of the most prominent
Republicans voicing concern about climate change and urging action.
“The potential results are catastrophic,” said Schulz, 95, in an interview with Bloomberg in 2014. “So let’s take out an insurance policy.”
Increased US efforts to curb emissions through
investing in new cleaner technologies and manufacturing could actually
boost US competitiveness, Liu countered. “That’s why I hope the
Republican’s administration will continue to support this process.”
A fortnight of discussions in Marrakech were
thrust into the spotlight last week by Trump’s victory. The negotiating
texts being drafted by delegates and officials in north African country
were suddenly overshadowed by a uncertain political future cast by
Trump’s shadow over the two-decade-old process.

Outgoing US Secretary of State John Kerry, who
helped secure the Paris Agreement last year, said the majority of US
citizens back action on climate change and tried to assuage concern.
“No one has a right to make decisions for billions of people based solely on ideology,” he said. “Climate change shouldn’t be a partisan issue. It isn’t a partisan issue for our military. It isn’t a partisan issue for our intelligence community.”
China’s President Xi Jinping underlined the
importance of cooperation between the two largest economies when he
spoke to Trump on Monday, said Liu, who added China will continue its
fight against climate change “whatever the circumstances.”
He added that richer nations should take more
responsibility than poor countries for financing the fight against
climate change, in line with the UN’s Framework Convention on Climate
Change. “Of course we’re still expecting developed countries including
the United States will continue to take the lead on mitigating climate
change,” he said.
Source: scmp.
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