Energy & Environment
Documents & Texts from America.gov
15 December 2009
The U.S. Is on Board
By U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
This article appeared in the New York Times edition of 15 December. The
author is U.S. Secretary of State
Our world is on an unsustainable path that threatens not only our environment,
but our economies and our security. It is time to launch a broad operational accord
on climate change that will set us on a new course.
A successful agreement depends upon a number of core elements, but two are shaping
up to be essential: first, that all major economies set forth strong national actions
and resolve to implement them; and second, that they agree to a system that enables
full transparency and creates confidence that national actions are in fact being
implemented.
Transparency, in particular, is what will ensure that this agreement becomes operational,
not just aspirational. We all need to take our share of responsibility, stand behind
our commitments, and mean what we say in order for an international agreement to
be credible.
Representatives from more than 190 countries have gathered in Copenhagen in the
hopes of meeting this urgent challenge to our planet. If we are serious about that
goal, we will all embrace these principles.
It is no secret that the United States turned a blind eye to climate change for
too long. But now, under President Obama’s leadership, we are taking responsibility
and taking action.
Already, the Obama administration has done more at home to promote clean energy
and address climate change than ever before in our history. We are investing more
than $80 billion in clean energy and working with Congress to advance comprehensive
climate and energy legislation. And we have announced our intention to cut our
emissions in the range of 17 percent below 2005 levels by 2020 and ultimately in
line with final climate and energy legislation.
In light of the president’s goals, the expected pathway in pending legislation
would extend those cuts to 30 percent by 2025, 42 percent by 2030, and more than
80 percent by 2050. These are the kind of strong national actions that a successful
agreement requires.
The United States has also pursued an unprecedented effort to engage partners
around the world in the fight against climate change, and we have produced real
results. President Obama launched the Major Economies Forum on Energy and Climate
which brought together key developed and developing countries to work through issues
essential to an accord. He also spearheaded an agreement, first among the G-20
and then among the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation nations, to phase out fossil
fuel subsidies. This effort alone could reduce global greenhouse gas emissions
by 10 percent or more by 2050.
So there should be no doubt about our commitment. We have come to Copenhagen ready
to take the steps necessary to achieve a comprehensive and operational new agreement
that will provide a foundation for long-term, sustainable economic growth.
This needs to be a common effort. All major economies, developed and developing,
need to take robust and transparent action to reduce their carbon emissions. Of
course, the actions required of the developed and major developing countries will
not be identical, but we must all do our part.
The simple fact is that nearly all of the growth in emissions in the next 20 years
will come from the developing world. Without their participation and commitment,
a solution is impossible. Some are concerned that a strong agreement on climate
change will undermine the efforts of developing nations to build their economies,
but the opposite is true. This is an opportunity to drive investment and job creation
around the world, while bringing energy services to hundreds of millions of the
world’s poor.
That is why United States is supporting an accord that both complements and promotes
sustainable development by moving the world toward a low-carbon economy. The accord
we seek will provide generous financial and technological support for developing
countries, particularly the poorest and most vulnerable, to help them reduce emissions
and adapt to climate change. And we are prepared to join an effort to mobilize
fast-start funding that will ramp up to $10 billion in 2012 to support the adaptation
and mitigation efforts of countries in need.
We can all see the way forward that has emerged from months of negotiations: decisive
national action, an operational accord that internationalizes those commitments,
assistance for nations that are the most vulnerable and least prepared to meet
the effects of climate change, and standards of transparency that provide credibility
to the entire process.
The United States is ready to embrace this path, and we hope that the rest of
the world will rally around it this week.
Hillary Rodham Clinton is secretary of state of the United States. |