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US, China in historic climate change deal

Published: 13 Nov 2014 - 06:12 am | Last Updated: 19 Jan 2022 - 04:27 pm

BEIJING: The United States and China yesterday announced ambitious targets on greenhouse gas emissions as part of a “historic” pact that climate scientists acclaimed but US Republicans denounced as a job-killer.

At a Beijing summit, the leaders of the world’s two biggest polluters put their stamp on attempts to breathe new life into action against global warming ahead of international talks in Paris next year.
US President Barack Obama said the joint announcement on the two countries’ emissions targets was a “historic agreement” and a “major milestone in the US-China relationship”. Chinese President Xi Jinping said the two had “agreed to make sure that international climate change negotiations will reach an agreement in Paris”.
Attempts to deal with climate change, which scientists warn is approaching a potentially catastrophic point of no return, have long been stymied by the unwillingness of the United States and China to work together on the problem. But China set a target for its greenhouse gas output to peak “around 2030”, which Obama commended as a commitment to “slow, peak and reverse the course” of its emissions.
And Obama, who faces scepticism as well as outright denial about climate change in the US Congress, set a goal for the United States to cut its own emissions of greenhouse gases by 26-28 percent from 2005 levels by 2025. “We have a special responsibility to lead the worldwide effort against climate change,” Obama said at a joint news conference with Xi. AFP