FILE – This April 20, 2011 file photo shows officials with Arizona-based First Solar and Public Service Co. of New Mexico gathering after the dedication of the utility's new 2-megawatt photovoltaic solar array in Albuquerque, N.M. VOA
World falling short
No other country has followed the United States on its path out of the Paris climate agreement.
President Trump and his supporters have said the agreement puts the United States at a competitive disadvantage because it requires Americans to cut their emissions but does not impose the same restrictions on other countries.
"The biggest emitters in the emerging economies, including China, India and Indonesia, all have very ambitious pledges under Paris," said Andrew Light, Distinguished Senior Fellow at the World Resources Institute and a former Obama administration climate advisor. "And it looks like they are on track to meeting them."
Meeting those pledges still would not keep the planet from disastrous warming. And efforts so far have not stopped greenhouse gas levels from rising, in the United States or globally. Emissions reached an all-time high last year, climbing more than 2% over 2017, at a time when U.N. scientists say global emissions must fall 45% by 2030 to avoid the worst consequences of climate change.
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Some 80 countries are prepared to announce bigger steps to cut their emissions at the U.N. climate summit in September, according to U.N. climate envoy Luis Alfonso de Alba, although he did not specify which ones.
"I am asking leaders not to come with beautiful speeches but to come with concrete plans to promote the climate action we need," said U.N. Secretary-General Luis Guterres. (VOA)