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Macron seeks climate pledges after U.S. withdrawal from Paris accord


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Macron seeks climate pledges after U.S. withdrawal from Paris accord

By Richard Lough

 

2017-12-12T002056Z_2_LYNXMPEDBB00D_RTROPTP_4_CLIMATECHANGE-SUMMIT-DINNER.JPG

French President Emmanuel Macron delivers a speech before a dinner hosted by Special envoy to the United Nations for climate change Michael Bloomberg (not pictured) at the Grand Palais, on the eve of the One Planet Summit held in Paris, France, December 11, 2017. REUTERS/Ian Langsdon/Pool

 

PARIS (Reuters) - French President Emmanuel Macron will on Tuesday urge wealthy countries and global companies to commit more funds to combating global warming and help poorer nations deal with the impact of climate change.

 

Macron is hosting the "One Planet" summit on the two-year anniversary of the Paris climate accord, which saw nearly 200 governments agree to end their heavy reliance on fossil fuels and limit further global warming.

 

Macron will want to show that progress towards those hard-fought goals is being made, even after President Donald Trump said in June that he was withdrawing the United States from the pact.

 

The French leader said Trump's decision to withdraw was a "deep wake-up call for the private sector" to take action.

 

"If we decide not to move and not change our way to produce, to invest, to behave, we will be responsible for billions of victims," he told U.S. television channel CBS News.

 

Developing nations say the rich are not on track with a broader commitment in the Paris accord to provide $100 billion a year by 2020 - from public and private sources alike - to help them switch from fossil fuels to greener energy sources and adapt to the effects of climate change.

 

Though Macron has said that what is missing are concrete projects with real financing, no internationally binding commitments will be announced.

 

Some 50 world leaders are due to attend the Paris meeting, including Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto and leaders of states at the sharp end of climate change such as Chad, Madagascar and Peru.

 

The United States will send only an official delegation from the Paris Embassy, but superstars Leonardo Di Caprio and Arnold Schwarzenegger and California Governor Jerry Brown, leader of the world's sixth largest economy, are due to champion a more concerted effort to tackle global warming.

 

There will be a focus on how public and private financial institutions can mobilize more money and how investors can pressure corporate giants to shift towards more ecologically friendly strategies.

 

"The missing piece of the jigsaw is the funding to help the world’s poorer countries access clean energy so they don’t follow the fossil fuel-powered path of the rich world," said Mohamed Adow, charity Christian Aid’s lead on climate change.  

 

"Without adequate finance, there is no way developing countries can deal with climate change or decarbonise fast enough to deliver the Paris goals."

 

(Reporting by Richard Lough, Additional reporting by Leigh Thomas, editing by Larry King and John Stonestreet)

 
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-- © Copyright Reuters 2017-12-12
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The biggest difference that can be made long term as far as I am concerned is birth control. I have done my part as I have no children. Shift the economic model so that you don't need an ever expanding  population to pay for the aging population.  

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2 hours ago, Ulic said:

The biggest difference that can be made long term as far as I am concerned is birth control. I have done my part as I have no children. Shift the economic model so that you don't need an ever expanding  population to pay for the aging population.  

Over population is the elephant in the room and yet it's the looming disaster that must not be named.  Populations starve.  Clean water gets more scarce every day.  Energy costs push ever higher even after oil prices have all but collapsed.  Masses risk everything to immigrate somewhere else...  If you should happen to witness some outburst on an airliner you're seeing the inevitable results of overcrowding in a microcosm.  Environmental concerns are targeted at symptoms, at best just kick the can down the road a little, and don't lay a finger on the real issue.  The current world population is about 7.6 billion, almost having doubled since 1975.  The current "doubling time" is estimated at only 55 years.  Do some math.

 

Either the planet will eventually impose its OWN population controls, or countries fighting over increasingly scarce resources will.  Neither outcome is likely to be pretty.

 

 

 

 

 

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