Why Did Trump Leave the Paris Agreement? What You Need to Know About the Climate Pact

Why Did Trump Leave the Paris Agreement? What You Need to Know About the Climate Pact
  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.

From Cosmopolitan

Update, 11/4/20:

The U.S. has formally withdrawn from the Paris Agreement. Today marks the first day Trump's infamous 2017 decision goes into effect.

As BBC News puts it, this withdrawal from a global climate change solution "raises questions of trust" in the United States, in addition to being a serious blow against climate activists. The U.S. is the only country out of nearly 200 to walk away despite the fact that the country has emitted "more cumulative carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than any other country since the industrial era began in the mid-1800s."

All hope isn't lost though: The U.S. could still rejoin at a later date. In fact, Joe Biden said if he's elected president, he'd seek to rejoin ASAP.

Original story, 06/01/17:

Before I begin, let's agree to agree on this basic fact: Climate change is real, and it's happening right now. Its effects have already displaced communities, caused damage to homes and cities, and threatened food and water supplies. But this is just the beginning. The year 2016 was the warmest year ever recorded, and temperatures are projected to keep rising, which means you can expect more devastating consequences to come.

Greenhouse gas emissions (like the methane released during livestock production) directly result in a warming planet. Humans have caused all of the warming that's happened since 1970, according to the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. More specifically, Americans are responsible for a lot of the emissions that lead to climate change.

But that doesn't mean American leaders are sold on this well-documented science. President Donald Trump has tweeted that climate change is a hoax and he put Scott Pruitt, a climate change skeptic, in charge of the Environmental Protection Agency. Since the start of Pruitt's tenure, the EPA has removed climate change information from its website and dismissed scientists from an advisory board. Trump signed an executive order approving the construction of the Keystone XL and Dakota Access pipelines. He has wasted no time going after environmental regulations, including signing an executive order to begin dismantling the Obama administration's Clean Power Plan, which set forth goals to reduce emissions from coal power plants. Trump has also been threatening to withdraw the United States from the Paris Agreement since his campaign, and on Thursday, he officially announced that he would, in fact, pull out from the deal.

The legal process for leaving the accord is complicated, though, and wouldn't officially take effect until Nov. 4, 2020—the day after the next presidential election. Here's what you need to know about the Paris Agreement in the meantime.

What Is the Paris Agreement?

On Dec. 12, 2015, 195 countries, or nearly every nation that exists on this planet, agreed to the terms of a global climate pact known as the Paris Agreement. It took decades of deliberating and stalling for something like this to happen. Finally, the entire world was on the same page: Climate change is the single most important crisis facing humanity and it needs to be addressed in a massive, coordinated way.

The Paris Agreement's primary goal is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in order to keep global temperatures from rising above 2 degrees Celsius at the end of this century. We're already at almost 1 degree Celsius above pre-Industrial temperatures, so 2 degrees is really not far off. Based on the pace at which things are moving now, staying below 2 degrees Celsius, or even the more desirable 1.5 degrees Celsius, seems utterly impossible.

A warming planet doesn't just mean hotter days, unpredictable weather, and an uptick in cataclysmic weather events. "Climate change can indirectly increase risks of violent conflicts in the form of civil war and inter-group violence," according to a report from the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Still, nobody likes to have to make sacrifices, even if the fate of the world is at stake. But the fate of the world is at stake, so here we are.

Here's the thing though: No country is actually obligated to make any sacrifices. The Paris Agreement is voluntary. Individual nations came up with formal plans that include targets for emissions reduction, and those plans are known as nationally determined contributions. Because the agreement is not legally binding, there's no material consequence a country would face if it failed to meet its nationally determined contributions. But the idea is that since everyone is involved in this enormous group project, everyone is watching.

Why Did Trump Leave the Accord?

"Canceling" the agreement was one of Trump's campaign promises, and he wanted to follow through. In a speech in the White House Rose Garden, he said the deal was an economic defeat for American workers and gave too many advantages to other nations. "We want fair treatment," Trump said as he announced that the U.S. would leave. "We don't want other countries and other leaders to laugh at us anymore."

There were two opposing groups within the White House arguing over the issue. On Team Stay were Ivanka Trump, Jared Kushner, and Rex Tillerson. But Team Leave—which included climate change skeptics Scott Pruitt and Steve Bannon—won out. According to The New York Times, Bannon's political stake in this debate was that if Team Stay won, his influence would be diminished and the hardcore Trump supporters would have to live with yet another broken campaign promise.

The accord, Trump said on Thursday, imposes "draconian financial" burdens on the U.S., and is "simply the latest example of Washington entering into an agreement that disadvantages the United States, to the exclusive benefit of other countries, leaving American workers, who I love, and taxpayers to absorb the cost in terms of lost jobs, lowered wages, shuttered factories and vastly diminished economic production."

In 2010, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change established the Green Climate Fund. Through the fund, richer developed nations contribute money for poorer developing nations to lower emissions and do more to combat climate change. According to Factcheck.org, the U.S. has paid $500 million out of its $3 billion pledge to the Green Climate Fund. Sweden, meanwhile, has paid $581 million. America's pledge also isn't the biggest when you look at the per-capita numbers, which amounts to about $9 per person. Here, Sweden also bests the U.S. at $60 per person. On May 13, at a climate change talk in Bonn, Germany, State Department envoy Trigg Talley said that the U.S. is not contributing to the fund this year.

In his speech announcing the exit, Trump said he was open to "renegotiating" the agreement. But leaders from Germany, France, and Italy said that would not be possible, and other world leaders criticized the move. And according to a Huffington Post/YouGov poll, a majority of Americans don't want to leave the agreement either.

What Happens Now?

You mean apart from looking really, really bad to the rest of the world? A few possible outcomes:

Emissions will likely rise dramatically. In the first months of this administration, Trump and Pruitt have shown nothing but contempt for climate change science, clean energy, and protecting the environment, so there's no indication that they will back out of the Paris Agreement and then take measures to drastically reduce emissions. Without the agreement to hold the U.S. accountable, polluters could go on polluting.

The U.S. could get hit with trade tariffs. If the U.S. continues to emit carbon to the degree that it does today, other nations could impose carbon tariffs on stuff made in America, according to The New York Times, and that would be problematic for American businesses and the economy.

American workers will likely lose out on jobs. Many countries and corporations around the world have been investing heavily in green energy. The cost of renewable energy has gone down, making it much easier to make changes to infrastructure. Without being party to the Paris Agreement, argues Erik Solheim, the executive director of the U.N.'s environment program, the U.S. would fall behind in the job market.

China could take the lead. "There's no space for a vacuum," global governance expert Maria Ivanova told The Guardian, "so if the U.S. leaves the world of clean energy and energy efficiency, then that vacuum will be filled by somebody, probably China."

You Might Also Like