Here’s how Biden could get the U.S. to lead on climate change again
clock Kevin Rudd, a former prime minister of Australia, is president of the Asia Society Policy Institute. Bill Hare is chief executive and senior scientist at Climate Analytics. President-elect Joe Biden has pledged to begin the process of rejoining the Paris agreement with the stroke of a pen. As important as this will be, a more significant demonstration of Bidens determination to rejoin the international fight against climate change will come in the form of the target the United States then puts on the table as its contribution toward meeting the goals of the agreement. In 2015, the Obama administration committed to reduce U.S. emissions by 26 to 28 percent below 2005 levels by 2025. The beating heart of the Paris agreement is its requirement that countries ratchet up their ambition every five years. And even though the rollbacks of the Trump administration mean the United States will now miss this target , Biden has committed to quickly put the country on an even steeper trajectory of cuts by 2030, en route to achieving net zero emissions by 2050. The new 2030 target will be an early signal of where the rubber hits the road internationally for the Biden administration. And, along with the administrations willingness to use trade policy as a lever for climate action , it will be a key arrow in the United States diplomatic quiver for rallying other major emitters to increase their own targets. Analysis by the Asia Society Policy Institute and Climate Analytics shows that this target is likely to be somewhere between a 38 to 54 percent cut in emissions below 2005 levels by 2030. This is based on an assessment of the Biden campaigns clean energy and climate package, including his commitment to decarbonize the U.S. energy system by 2035 the biggest element of the package by far. While this will not be enough to immediately align the United States with the Paris agreements goal of limiting global temperature increases to 1.5 degrees Celsius, it would represent a huge first restorative step within a relatively short period. Importantly, given uncertainties about the makeup of the Senate, the report also finds that around half of Bidens plans could be achieved without the need for congressional support. However, the possibility of protracted legal challenges seems likely, not least given the conservative balance of courts across the United States. In developing the new target, the Biden administration will want to take its time to gauge the current state of U.S. efforts across the board, assess the level of congressional support for different measures and seek input from business, industry and civil society. However, it will be essential for the United States to put an ambitious new target on the table well before the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, Scotland, in November next year, and ideally around the time of the Group of Seven and Group of 20 summits, which will be key steppingstone moments. One of the best options could be for the United States to use next Septembers U.N. General Assembly as an opportunity to announce its new target and convene the leaders of major emitters at the same time fulfilling a commitment Biden made during the campaign trail. Either way, one country will be watching Bidens decisions more closely than any other: China. While President Xi Jinpings announcement in September that China will reach carbon neutrality was a game changer, whether that is seen to cover all greenhouse gases is just as significant. China has also announced that it will update its own 2030 target for curbing emissions before the U.N. climate conference but when, and with what level of ambition, are important issues. All this remains the subject of live political debate in Beijing in the wake of the Communist Party leaderships conference last month and as preparations continue on its all-important Five-Year Plan. A recent landmark effort led by Chinas long-serving climate envoy, Xie Zhenhua, confirmed this and recommended that the country accelerate decarbonization in the short term, including by peaking emissions around 2025. This makes sense, but to avoid higher cumulative emissions over time, even deeper cuts will be needed in the medium term, including through halting the construction of all new coal-fired power plants followed by a complete phase out of all coal power by 2040. We should expect further details of Chinas thinking as early as December when the secretary general convenes a summit to celebrate the five-year anniversary of the Paris agreement. Taken together, Xis new goals and Bidens plans have already wiped off 0.3 to 0.4 degrees Celsius from forecasts for global warming this century. With recent announcements by other big emitters Japan and South Korea for the first time, the Paris agreements 1.5 degrees Celsius temperature limit seems within reach. By any measure, this is a very big deal. Whether the rest of the world now also chooses to ramp up climate action will in large part rest on the decisions taken in Beijing and Washington, individually and jointly. Last week marked the anniversary of the first U.S.-China joint announcement on climate change in 2014. And six years on, the world will be watching just as closely at what the worlds two largest emitters are able to do. Read more: The Posts View: Global warming is already here. Denying it is unforgivable. 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