The New York Times

What Is the UNFCCC and Why Is the U.S. Pulling Out?

Published: Jan 8, 2026 Crawled: Feb 4, 2026 at 9:58 PM Length: 442 words
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President Trump on Wednesday said he was withdrawing the United States from the international treaty that forms the basis for global cooperation in the fight against climate change. Established in 1992, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, or UNFCCC, is the treaty that sets a legal framework for international negotiations to address climate change. Under the treatys umbrella, nations gather every year to hammer out how they can collectively slow down the warming of the Earths atmosphere, which is caused principally by the burning of coal, oil and gas. After years of negotiation, led in part by the United States and China, countries of the world agreed in 2015 to each set their own targets to reduce rising greenhouse gas emissions. Thats known widely as the Paris Agreement, because it was reached at a meeting in Paris under the auspices of the Convention on Climate Change. The convention has an office in Bonn, Germany, and . The United States customarily pays for around 20 percent of its core budget. Last year, when the Trump administration withdrew the U.S. contribution, the philanthropist and former Mayor Michael Bloomberg filled the gap. Since 1992, 198 countries have approved or ratified the convention. The United States was the first industrialized country to join, after ratification by the U.S. Senate. It makes the United States an outlier. It matters with regard to Americas standing in the world, especially in the eyes of vulnerable countries that correctly point out that the United States is responsible for the largest share of the cumulative climate pollution heating up the Earths atmosphere. Once the U.S. is out of a treaty, it may be hard for it to get back in. Some experts believe a future president could easily rejoin the treaty. Others say the U.S. Senate would need to ratify it again, a vote that requires a two-thirds vote, which may be an elusive task in todays polarized politics. The announcement said the withdrawal would take a year to go into effect. The administration U.S. support for all global agreements and organizations. It imposed a 180-day deadline, which expired in August, 2025. The move takes the United States out of global discussions on renewable energy and measures to adapt to climate hazards. It is not only self-defeating to let other countries write the global rules of the road for the inevitable transition to clean energy, but also to skip out on trillions of dollars in investment, jobs, lower energy costs, and new markets for American clean technologies, said Manish Bapna, head of the Natural Resources Defense Council. Somini Sengupta is the international climate reporter on the Times climate team.

Article Details

Article ID
16843
Article Name
what-is-unfccc-climate-treaty
Date Published
Jan 8, 2026
Date Crawled
Feb 4, 2026 at 9:58 PM
Newspaper Website
nytimes.com