Trump
signs order to withdraw US from Paris climate agreement for second time
On first day
back as president, Trump signs letter giving notice to UN of US exit from
treaty seeking to curb climate crisis effects
Dharna Noor
Mon 20 Jan
2025 23.51 GMT
Donald Trump
on Monday moved to withdraw the US, the world’s second biggest emitter of
planet-heating pollution, from the Paris climate agreement for a second time,
and put the United Nations on notice.
On his first
day back as president, Trump signed an executive order on stage in front of
supporters at an arena in Washington DC which he said was aimed at quitting
what he called the “unfair one-sided Paris climate accord rip off”.
He also
signed a letter to the United Nations giving it notice that the US was exiting,
which starts the formal process of withdrawal from the world’s main effort to
mitigate the worst impacts of the climate crisis.
It will take
about a year for the withdrawal to be formalized.
When
enacted, the US will join Iran, Libya and Yemen as the only countries outside
the global agreement, which Joe Biden had rejoined in 2021 after Trump
confirmed he would exit it in his first term in 2017.
Trump, who
also signed eight other executive orders on stage, told his supporters at the
arena: “The United States will not sabotage its own industries while China
pollutes with impunity. China uses a lot of dirty energy, but they produce a
lot of energy. When that stuff goes up in the air, it doesn’t stay there ... It
floats into the United States of America after three-and-a-half to
five-and-a-half days.”
The
confirmation of the move was also in a White House document published earlier
Monday outlining America First Priorities, in a package of measures under the
headline “Make America affordable and energy dominant again”.
Trump has
also pledged to reverse Biden’s efforts to grow the US’s clean energy sector,
which Trump has called “the green new scam”, promising in his inauguration
address to “drill baby drill” and remove all limits on America’s booming fossil
fuel industry.
The fossil
fuel industry is expected to expand further during Trump’s second presidency
despite already producing record amounts of oil. Under Biden, the country
became the world’s biggest gas producer and last year saw a record 758 oil and
gas drilling licenses issued.
One estimate
before Trump won last November’s election calculated his return to the White
House could add 4bn tonnes to US emissions by 2030.
Gina
McCarthy, a former EPA Administrator under Barack Obama, said that Trump
“abdicated” his responsibility to Americans by leaving the Paris accord.
“The United
States must continue to show leadership on the international stage if we want
to have any say in how trillions of dollars in financial investments, policies,
and decisions are made that will shape the course of our economy and the
world’s ability to fight climate change,” she said in a statement.
During
Trump’s first term, pulling the US from the treaty had a limited impact. Though
he announced the exit shortly after taking the oath of office in 2017, the
decision did not take effect until November 2020 due to complicated United
Nations regulations. This time, however, Trump’s withdrawal could take as
little as one year as the administration will not be bound by the accord’s
initial three-year commitment.
In the weeks
before Trump’s inauguration, the outgoing Biden administration formally filed
new plans under the Paris agreement for tougher 2035 emissions targets for the
US, intended as a “capstone” on his legacy on the climate, which included the
landmark clean energy investment in the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022.
Under
Biden’s new target, the US would have had to cut greenhouse gases by between
61% and 66% by 2035, compared with 2005 levels – a substantial strengthening of
current goals that administration officials said would put the US on the path
to net zero carbon by 2050.
Though he
was mindful that Trump would not adhere to the targets rolled out in December,
Biden’s senior adviser, John Podesta, at the time said: “Sub-national leaders
across the US can continue to show the world that US climate leadership is
determined by so much more than who sits in the Oval Office.”
Climate
advocates now hope cities and leaders across the US will continue to push the
clean energy transition, with Republican districts benefitting most from the
IRA investment, and cleaner energy, particularly solar, being cheaper than
dirty energy like coal.
“[R]est
assured, our states, cities, businesses, and local institutions stand ready to
pick up the baton of US climate leadership and do all they can – despite
federal complacency – to continue the shift to a clean energy economy,” said
McCarthy, who is now managing co-chair of America Is All In, a coalition of
climate-concerned American leaders.
Basav Sen, a
director at the left-leaning thinktank Institute for Policy Studies, said that
though he believes the Paris agreement is inadequate to limit global warming,
Trump exiting it is “reprehensible”.
“He and his
administration do not care about cooperative global action to avert climate
catastrophe, and want to recklessly expand fossil fuel production,” he said.
The fossil
fuel industry donated $75m to Trump’s campaign.
The US’s
withdrawal from the climate agreement “undermines the collective fight against
climate change at a time when unity and urgency are more critical than ever”,
said Harjeet Singh, climate activist and founding director of the Satat Sampada
Climate Foundation. The impact of the decisions will be felt most harshly by
developing countries, he said.
“These
vulnerable nations and communities, which have contributed the least to global
emissions, will bear the brunt of intensifying floods, rising seas, and
crippling droughts,” Singh said in a statement.
In November
2025, world leaders will meet in Brazil for a global UN summit, which is likely
to be the last chance for the world to forge a global plan to prevent
temperatures reaching 1.5C above pre-industrial levels. Experts say fossil fuel
emissions must be cut quickly and deeply to avoid the worst outcomes including
more extreme weather, sea level rise, biodiversity loss, food and water
insecurity and worsening health impacts.
Paul
Bledsoe, a former Clinton White House climate official who now lectures at
American University’s Center for Environmental Policy, speaking at the time of
the Biden targets being announced in December last year, said: “Trump is
risking the climate stability and safety of the planet as part of a culture war
political strategy, heedless of billions who will suffer.”
Trump’s
announcement confirming he will quit the Paris agreement comes days after the
outbreak of devastating wildfires in Los Angeles, the latest in a growing
series of extreme weather disasters linked to the climate crisis. Experts have
described how the fires are linked to unprecedented compounding climate
conditions of extreme hurricane winds, drought and relatively high temperatures
in January. They have caused at least 27 deaths and as much as $250bn of
dollars of damage. Trump used the disaster to spread disinformation and stoke
political division.
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