World

US, UK laud China vow to end coal funding abroad, but seek more

Western countries say world’s largest emitter should step up efforts at home to combat climate change

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 23 Sep 2021 6:00PM

US, UK laud China vow to end coal funding abroad, but seek more
China’s promise to stop backing coal overseas all but dries up the world’s foreign assistance to the dirty form of energy in developing nations after similar announcements by South Korea and Japan. – AFP pic, September 23, 2021

NEW YORK – The United States and Britain yesterday welcomed China’s promise to end funding for coal projects overseas, but voiced hope that the world’s largest emitter will also do more at home on climate change.

President Xi Jinping told the United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday that China will stop backing coal overseas, all but drying up the world’s foreign assistance to the dirty form of energy in developing countries after similar announcements by South Korea and Japan.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, seeking to rally international support for strong climate action ahead of UN climate talks in Glasgow in November, voiced hope for a complete, global end to coal by 2040.

“I thank President Xi for what he has done to end China’s international financing of coal, and I hope China will now go further and phase out the domestic use of coal as well,” he told the General Assembly.

“Because the experience of the UK shows it can be done.”

Despite China’s pledge on overseas assistance, it has kept investing at home in coal – an issue raised during a visit earlier this month by US climate envoy John Kerry.

A US official, speaking to reporters on the customary condition of anonymity, said of Xi’s move: “We welcome this announcement, but we also recognise that more needs to be done.

“We look forward to hearing more about the additional steps that they can take in this decisive decade to further reduce their national emissions.”

The official said further Chinese action will “help put the world more closely on a trajectory that will hold temperatures from rising to well above 1.5°C”, as appears increasingly likely despite an aspiration set by the 2015 Paris accord.

UN scientists said warming of 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels is a threshold at which the planet can avoid the worst ravages of climate change, including increasingly severe weather, droughts and flooding.

US President Joe Biden has put a high priority on the environment after defeating climate sceptic Donald Trump, and in his own UN speech on Tuesday, vowed to double American aid for countries hardest hit by climate change, a key gap ahead of the Glasgow talks. – AFP, September 23, 2021

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