US President Donald Trump on Thursday said he will withdraw the US from the Paris Climate Accord – a landmark 2015 global agreement to fight climate change, spurning pleas from US allies and corporate leaders in an action that fulfilled a major campaign pledge. Trump said at a ceremony in the White House Rose Garden:
Trump tapped into the "America First" message he used when he was elected president last year, saying:
Former US President Obama expressed his regret in a statement:
Decrying the Paris accord’s “draconian” financial and economic burdens, Trump said that American withdrawal “represents a reassertion of American sovereignty.” Trump said the United States would begin negotiations either to re-enter the Paris accord or to have a new agreement “on terms that are fair to the United States, its businesses, its workers, its people, its taxpayers.”
Tesla Inc Chief Executive Elon Musk said on Thursday he would leave White House advisory councils, following Trump’s announcement.
On Wednesday, Musk had said he had done all he could to convince Trump to not withdraw from the Paris accord.
Canada expressed its disappointment over the US President’s decision on Thursday. Environment Minister Catherine McKenna said on Thursday:
The German government’s Social Democrat ministers called President Trump's decision to withdraw the United States from the Paris climate accord damaging for Americans, Europeans and all other peoples of the world. The seven ministers from the left-leaning Social Democratic Party (SPD) said in a statement:
The SPD is a junior partner in Chancellor Angela Merkel's ruling coalition.
US Senator Bernie Sanders, who sought the Democratic presidential nomination last year, said:
The United States was one of 195 nations that agreed to the accord in Paris in December 2015, a deal that former US President Barack Obama was instrumental in brokering. Maintaining his stance on the climate accord, Obama said in a statement:
The United States had committed to reduce its emissions by 26 per cent to 28 per cent from 2005 levels by 2025. The United States, exceeded only by China in greenhouse gas emissions, accounts for more than 15 percent of the worldwide total.
International leaders had pressed Trump not to abandon the accord. At their meeting last month, the pope gave Trump a signed copy of his 2015 encyclical letter that called for protecting the environment from the effects of climate change and backed scientific evidence that it is caused by human activity.
With Trump's action, the United States will walk away from nearly every nation in the world on one of the pressing global issues of the 21st century. The pullout will align the United States with Syria and Nicaragua as the world's only non-participants in the accord.
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