Er denne mannen minst 8 år for seint ute?
Ooops, he did it again. Som ventet.
Men mannen gjør stor nasjon isolert og blott til latter? Tross litt popularitet i et oljetungt, stadig mer høyrevendt Norge.
Helt uten allierte venner er dog ikke 'Trumps nye USA'. Nasjoner som ikke er tilstuttet 'Paris avtalen': USA, Iran, Jemen og Libya. Men kan se ut som om det ikke blir helt enkelt å få solgt inn beslutningen til egne landsmenn...
Her er noen reaksjoner.
Global network of mayors react to President Trump withdrawing the US from the Paris Climate Agreement
January 21, 2025
President Trump has confirmed that he will once again withdraw the United States from the Paris Climate Agreement in his first days in office.
Despite this act of climate vandalism, American city mayors and the C40 Cities network have reaffirmed their commitment to leading the way forward to confront the climate crisis.
Our cities will remain the bastions of climate progress, working tirelessly to cut emissions, build a green economy through a just transition, protect our residents from the impacts of the climate crisis, and continue international collaboration.
https://www.c40.org/news/global-network-of-mayors-react-to-president-trump-paris-agreement/
World reacts to Trump withdrawing US from Paris climate pact
Published 01/20/2025, 04:09 PM
Updated 01/21/2025, 11:36 AM
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump ordered the U.S. to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement on Monday, once again placing the world's top historic emitter of greenhouse gases outside the global pact aimed at pushing nations to tackle climate change.
Here are some reactions to the announcement of the second U.S. withdrawal from the climate pact
https://www.investing.com/news/commodities-news/world-reacts-to-trumps-plan-to-withdraw-us-from-paris-climate-pact-3820778
Men mannen gjør stor nasjon isolert og blott til latter? Tross litt popularitet i et oljetungt, stadig mer høyrevendt Norge.
Helt uten allierte venner er dog ikke 'Trumps nye USA'. Nasjoner som ikke er tilstuttet 'Paris avtalen': USA, Iran, Jemen og Libya. Men kan se ut som om det ikke blir helt enkelt å få solgt inn beslutningen til egne landsmenn...
Her er noen reaksjoner.
Global network of mayors react to President Trump withdrawing the US from the Paris Climate Agreement
January 21, 2025
President Trump has confirmed that he will once again withdraw the United States from the Paris Climate Agreement in his first days in office.
Despite this act of climate vandalism, American city mayors and the C40 Cities network have reaffirmed their commitment to leading the way forward to confront the climate crisis.
Our cities will remain the bastions of climate progress, working tirelessly to cut emissions, build a green economy through a just transition, protect our residents from the impacts of the climate crisis, and continue international collaboration.
https://www.c40.org/news/global-network-of-mayors-react-to-president-trump-paris-agreement/
World reacts to Trump withdrawing US from Paris climate pact
Published 01/20/2025, 04:09 PM
Updated 01/21/2025, 11:36 AM
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump ordered the U.S. to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement on Monday, once again placing the world's top historic emitter of greenhouse gases outside the global pact aimed at pushing nations to tackle climate change.
Here are some reactions to the announcement of the second U.S. withdrawal from the climate pact
https://www.investing.com/news/commodities-news/world-reacts-to-trumps-plan-to-withdraw-us-from-paris-climate-pact-3820778
Redigert 23.01.2025 kl 12:05
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aksjeintr
21.01.2025 kl 23:47
680
Mao, vi må slutte å tro på at det grønne skiftet, investeringer i fornybar energi og utvikling og salg av nullutslippsbiler/lastebiler/båter mm avhenger av USA. Kina, India, Europa mfl vil fortsette dette med full styrke uavhengig av «drill baby drill» fra Trump. Jeg tror de nevnte landene mfl vil bruke denne muligheten til å rykke fra USA og bruke «Trump perioden» til å sikre et overtak på det grønne skiftet.
Trump, mener jeg, misforstår det hele og ser ikke mulighetene det hadde vært mtp industri og arbeidsplasser og derimot satset på å bli et foregangsland innen grønn industri. Jeg mener han med dette går i fullstendig feil retning med å forsøke og stoppe subsidier og trekke USA ut av Parisavtalen. Det at folk flest, inkl Trump, er imot denne avtalen og det grønne skiftet er at de rett og slett er redde for det nye og ønsker at verden skal fortsette som «før». Det går ikke å stikke hodet i sanden.
Heldigvis er det mange stater i USA som har evne til å se litt lenger frem en Trump og som vil fortsette å ha fokus på miljøtiltak og investering i det grønne skiftet uavhengig av Trump.
Trump, mener jeg, misforstår det hele og ser ikke mulighetene det hadde vært mtp industri og arbeidsplasser og derimot satset på å bli et foregangsland innen grønn industri. Jeg mener han med dette går i fullstendig feil retning med å forsøke og stoppe subsidier og trekke USA ut av Parisavtalen. Det at folk flest, inkl Trump, er imot denne avtalen og det grønne skiftet er at de rett og slett er redde for det nye og ønsker at verden skal fortsette som «før». Det går ikke å stikke hodet i sanden.
Heldigvis er det mange stater i USA som har evne til å se litt lenger frem en Trump og som vil fortsette å ha fokus på miljøtiltak og investering i det grønne skiftet uavhengig av Trump.
Redigert 21.01.2025 kl 23:49
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velkjent
22.01.2025 kl 07:55
578
Det kom en melding i går om at Kina hadde øket importen av kull frå Australia med 54% i 2024. Er det til realisering av "det grønne skiftet?"
CapitaL
22.01.2025 kl 09:54
508
Kina satte ny rekord i installert solkraft i 2024, og har allerede oppnådd målene de hadde satt for 2030!
Ingen tvil om at USA kan gå glipp av en lederrolle i det grønne skiftet, og med en bakstreversk president i det ovale kontoret blir nok ikke grønn teknologi det største satsningsområdet.. Hva vil Trump gjøre med IRA f.eks? I det minste bra at amerikanerne satser på kunstig intelligens, for naturlig intelligens er det så som så med i det landet der.
Kom over denne artikkelen i går, om Kinas forrykende satsing på fornybar energi:
https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/chinas-solar-wind-power-installed-capacity-soars-2024-2025-01-21/
Ingen tvil om at USA kan gå glipp av en lederrolle i det grønne skiftet, og med en bakstreversk president i det ovale kontoret blir nok ikke grønn teknologi det største satsningsområdet.. Hva vil Trump gjøre med IRA f.eks? I det minste bra at amerikanerne satser på kunstig intelligens, for naturlig intelligens er det så som så med i det landet der.
Kom over denne artikkelen i går, om Kinas forrykende satsing på fornybar energi:
https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/chinas-solar-wind-power-installed-capacity-soars-2024-2025-01-21/
Rect Angel
22.01.2025 kl 15:31
387
Folkelig støtte til Trump i hjemlandet er det så som så med her.
Fra NBC/AP.
Donald Trump
What is the Paris agreement and what will a US withdrawal mean? The move explained
Trump's action, hours after he was sworn in to a second term, echoed his directive in 2017, when he announced that the U.S. would abandon the global Paris accord
By The Associated Press • Published January 21, 2025 • Updated on January 21, 2025 at 8:19 am
...
What does this mean?
The move deals a blow to worldwide efforts to combat global warming and once again distances the U.S. from its closest allies.
Laurence Tubiana, CEO of the European Climate Foundation and a key architect of the Paris accord, called the planned U.S. withdrawal unfortunate but said action to slow climate change “is stronger than any single country’s politics and policies."
The global context for Trump's action is “very different to 2017,'' Tubiana said Monday, adding that “there is unstoppable economic momentum behind the global transition, which the U.S has gained from and led but now risks forfeiting."
The International Energy Agency expects the global market for key clean energy technologies to triple to more than $2 trillion by 2035, she said.
“The impacts of the climate crisis are also worsening. The terrible wildfires in Los Angeles are the latest reminder that Americans, like everyone else, are affected by worsening climate change,” Tubiana said.
Gina McCarthy, who served as White House climate adviser under President Joe Biden, said that if Trump, a Republican, “truly wants America to lead the global economy, become energy independent and create good-paying American jobs," then he must “stay focused on growing our clean energy industry. Clean technologies are driving down energy costs for people all across our country."
The world is now long-term 2.3 degrees Fahrenheit above mid-1800s temperatures. Most but not all climate monitoring agencies said global temperatures last year passed the warming mark of 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit, and all said it was the warmest year on record.
While the first Trump-led withdrawal from the landmark U.N. agreement — adopted by 196 nations — shocked and angered nations across the globe, “not a single country followed the U.S. out the door,” said Alden Meyer, a longtime climate negotiations analyst with the European think tank E3G.
Instead, other nations renewed their commitment to slowing climate change, along with investors, businesses, governors, mayors and others in the U.S., Meyer and other experts said.
About half of Americans “somewhat” or “strongly” oppose U.S. action to withdraw from the climate accord, and even Republicans aren’t overwhelmingly in favor, according according to a poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. Only about 2 in 10 U.S. adults “somewhat” or “strongly” in favor of withdrawing from the Paris agreement, while about one-quarter are neutral.
Much of the opposition to U.S. withdrawal comes from Democrats, but Republicans display some ambivalence as well. Slightly less than half of Republicans are in favor of withdrawing from the climate accord, while about 2 in 10 are opposed.
China several years ago passed the United States as the world's largest annual carbon dioxide emitting nation. The U.S. — the second biggest annual carbon polluting country — put 4.9 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide in the air in 2023, down 11% from a decade earlier, according to the scientists who track emissions for the Global Carbon Project.
But carbon dioxide lasts in the atmosphere for centuries, so the United States has put more of the heat-trapping gas that is now in the air than any other nation. The U.S. is responsible for nearly 22% of the carbon dioxide put in the atmosphere since 1950, according to Global Carbon Project.
While global efforts to fight climate change continued during Trump's first term, many experts worry that a second Trump term will be more damaging, with the United States withdrawing even further from climate efforts in a way that could cripple future presidents’ efforts. With Trump, who has dismissed climate change, in charge of the world’s leading economy, those experts fear other countries, especially China, could use it as an excuse to ease off their own efforts to curb carbon emissions.
Simon Stiell, the U.N. climate change executive secretary, held out hope that the U.S. would continue to embrace the global clean energy boom.
“Ignoring it only sends all that vast wealth to competitor economies, while climate disasters like droughts, wildfires and superstorms keep getting worse," Stiell said. “The door remains open to the Paris Agreement, and we welcome constructive engagement from any and all countries.”
https://www.nbcchicago.com/news/national-international/changing-climate/what-is-the-paris-agreement-and-what-will-a-us-withdrawal-mean-the-move-explained/3651988/
Fra NBC/AP.
Donald Trump
What is the Paris agreement and what will a US withdrawal mean? The move explained
Trump's action, hours after he was sworn in to a second term, echoed his directive in 2017, when he announced that the U.S. would abandon the global Paris accord
By The Associated Press • Published January 21, 2025 • Updated on January 21, 2025 at 8:19 am
...
What does this mean?
The move deals a blow to worldwide efforts to combat global warming and once again distances the U.S. from its closest allies.
Laurence Tubiana, CEO of the European Climate Foundation and a key architect of the Paris accord, called the planned U.S. withdrawal unfortunate but said action to slow climate change “is stronger than any single country’s politics and policies."
The global context for Trump's action is “very different to 2017,'' Tubiana said Monday, adding that “there is unstoppable economic momentum behind the global transition, which the U.S has gained from and led but now risks forfeiting."
The International Energy Agency expects the global market for key clean energy technologies to triple to more than $2 trillion by 2035, she said.
“The impacts of the climate crisis are also worsening. The terrible wildfires in Los Angeles are the latest reminder that Americans, like everyone else, are affected by worsening climate change,” Tubiana said.
Gina McCarthy, who served as White House climate adviser under President Joe Biden, said that if Trump, a Republican, “truly wants America to lead the global economy, become energy independent and create good-paying American jobs," then he must “stay focused on growing our clean energy industry. Clean technologies are driving down energy costs for people all across our country."
The world is now long-term 2.3 degrees Fahrenheit above mid-1800s temperatures. Most but not all climate monitoring agencies said global temperatures last year passed the warming mark of 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit, and all said it was the warmest year on record.
While the first Trump-led withdrawal from the landmark U.N. agreement — adopted by 196 nations — shocked and angered nations across the globe, “not a single country followed the U.S. out the door,” said Alden Meyer, a longtime climate negotiations analyst with the European think tank E3G.
Instead, other nations renewed their commitment to slowing climate change, along with investors, businesses, governors, mayors and others in the U.S., Meyer and other experts said.
About half of Americans “somewhat” or “strongly” oppose U.S. action to withdraw from the climate accord, and even Republicans aren’t overwhelmingly in favor, according according to a poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. Only about 2 in 10 U.S. adults “somewhat” or “strongly” in favor of withdrawing from the Paris agreement, while about one-quarter are neutral.
Much of the opposition to U.S. withdrawal comes from Democrats, but Republicans display some ambivalence as well. Slightly less than half of Republicans are in favor of withdrawing from the climate accord, while about 2 in 10 are opposed.
China several years ago passed the United States as the world's largest annual carbon dioxide emitting nation. The U.S. — the second biggest annual carbon polluting country — put 4.9 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide in the air in 2023, down 11% from a decade earlier, according to the scientists who track emissions for the Global Carbon Project.
But carbon dioxide lasts in the atmosphere for centuries, so the United States has put more of the heat-trapping gas that is now in the air than any other nation. The U.S. is responsible for nearly 22% of the carbon dioxide put in the atmosphere since 1950, according to Global Carbon Project.
While global efforts to fight climate change continued during Trump's first term, many experts worry that a second Trump term will be more damaging, with the United States withdrawing even further from climate efforts in a way that could cripple future presidents’ efforts. With Trump, who has dismissed climate change, in charge of the world’s leading economy, those experts fear other countries, especially China, could use it as an excuse to ease off their own efforts to curb carbon emissions.
Simon Stiell, the U.N. climate change executive secretary, held out hope that the U.S. would continue to embrace the global clean energy boom.
“Ignoring it only sends all that vast wealth to competitor economies, while climate disasters like droughts, wildfires and superstorms keep getting worse," Stiell said. “The door remains open to the Paris Agreement, and we welcome constructive engagement from any and all countries.”
https://www.nbcchicago.com/news/national-international/changing-climate/what-is-the-paris-agreement-and-what-will-a-us-withdrawal-mean-the-move-explained/3651988/
Rect Angel
23.01.2025 kl 12:03
269
Du verden. Skal man le eller gråte?
Nå rapporterer nemlig Reuters at US Big Oil, representert ved Exxon Mobil, Chevron m.fl. nærmest trygler og ber Trump-administrasjonen om at USA forblir i 'Paris avtalen'.
Dette for best mulig å kunne bidra til kampen mot klimaendringer, og ikke minst for å beskytte disse selskapenes allerede foretatte og fremtidige investeringer innen sektorer som grønt hydrogen og karbonfangst.
Trump's climate withdrawal creates rare discord with Big Oil
By Valerie Volcovici and Sheila Dang
January 22, 202510:54 PM GMT+1Updated 4 hours ago
Withdrawal from Paris agreement increases regulatory ambiguity, risks
US energy firms planning long-term investments in technologies aimed at fighting climate change
US oil industry prefers engagement in global climate talks
WASHINGTON, Jan 22 (Reuters) - U.S. oil and gas producers are thrilled that President Donald Trump wants to encourage domestic energy development but say his decision to withdraw the United States from international climate cooperation will not help their investment plans in the global transition to cleaner energy.
The position reflects a rare note of discord between Trump and Big Oil, one of his most important constituencies and long considered the top villain behind climate change for pumping and selling the fossil fuels driving planetary warming.
Removing the United States from the Paris climate deal for the second time was among a flurry of first-day moves by Trump aimed at pumping up already record high domestic energy production, sending a signal to the rest of the world the U.S. will no longer engage in multilateral efforts to combat climate change.
He called the decade-old pact to limit global warming a "rip off" that puts the U.S. at a competitive disadvantage to China.
Big U.S. oil companies, however, believe the withdrawal only limits Washington's ability to influence an ongoing global energy transition and exposes them to an uneven regulatory environment, according to Reuters interviews with industry representatives.
Marty Durbin, president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Global Energy Institute representing U.S. energy companies, said its members would have preferred Trump keep the U.S. involved in the pact.
"While we prefer that the U.S. government remain engaged in the UN climate process, the private sector is committed to developing the solutions necessary to meet the energy needs of a growing global economy while addressing the climate challenge," he said.
Bethany Williams, a spokesperson for the American Petroleum Institute - whose members include Exxon Mobil (XOM.N), opens new tab and Chevron (CVX.N), opens new tab - said the group has "long supported the ambitions of the Paris Agreement."
Exxon's CEO Darren Woods had made an early plea to the newly-elected president at the COP29 climate summit in Azerbaijan in November to keep the U.S. in the Paris pact, saying the cycle of exiting and re-entering the agreement would create long-term policy uncertainty for companies.
Exxon and other big oil companies are planning long-term investments in technologies intended to fight climate change, including green hydrogen and carbon capture, while also navigating decisions about new oil and gas exploration.
Exxon and Occidental did not respond to requests for comment. Chevron and ConocoPhillips declined to comment.
Asked about the Paris withdrawal order, the president of the American Exploration and Production Council (AXPC), representing U.S. independent drillers, said it was important for U.S. industry to be part of the global climate discussion.
"It's critical that any conversation about addressing climate change must be global in nature, and also recognize that America is the world leader in both energy production and emissions reductions," said AXPC CEO Anne Bradbury.
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/trumps-climate-withdrawal-creates-rare-discord-with-big-oil-2025-01-22/
Nå rapporterer nemlig Reuters at US Big Oil, representert ved Exxon Mobil, Chevron m.fl. nærmest trygler og ber Trump-administrasjonen om at USA forblir i 'Paris avtalen'.
Dette for best mulig å kunne bidra til kampen mot klimaendringer, og ikke minst for å beskytte disse selskapenes allerede foretatte og fremtidige investeringer innen sektorer som grønt hydrogen og karbonfangst.
Trump's climate withdrawal creates rare discord with Big Oil
By Valerie Volcovici and Sheila Dang
January 22, 202510:54 PM GMT+1Updated 4 hours ago
Withdrawal from Paris agreement increases regulatory ambiguity, risks
US energy firms planning long-term investments in technologies aimed at fighting climate change
US oil industry prefers engagement in global climate talks
WASHINGTON, Jan 22 (Reuters) - U.S. oil and gas producers are thrilled that President Donald Trump wants to encourage domestic energy development but say his decision to withdraw the United States from international climate cooperation will not help their investment plans in the global transition to cleaner energy.
The position reflects a rare note of discord between Trump and Big Oil, one of his most important constituencies and long considered the top villain behind climate change for pumping and selling the fossil fuels driving planetary warming.
Removing the United States from the Paris climate deal for the second time was among a flurry of first-day moves by Trump aimed at pumping up already record high domestic energy production, sending a signal to the rest of the world the U.S. will no longer engage in multilateral efforts to combat climate change.
He called the decade-old pact to limit global warming a "rip off" that puts the U.S. at a competitive disadvantage to China.
Big U.S. oil companies, however, believe the withdrawal only limits Washington's ability to influence an ongoing global energy transition and exposes them to an uneven regulatory environment, according to Reuters interviews with industry representatives.
Marty Durbin, president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Global Energy Institute representing U.S. energy companies, said its members would have preferred Trump keep the U.S. involved in the pact.
"While we prefer that the U.S. government remain engaged in the UN climate process, the private sector is committed to developing the solutions necessary to meet the energy needs of a growing global economy while addressing the climate challenge," he said.
Bethany Williams, a spokesperson for the American Petroleum Institute - whose members include Exxon Mobil (XOM.N), opens new tab and Chevron (CVX.N), opens new tab - said the group has "long supported the ambitions of the Paris Agreement."
Exxon's CEO Darren Woods had made an early plea to the newly-elected president at the COP29 climate summit in Azerbaijan in November to keep the U.S. in the Paris pact, saying the cycle of exiting and re-entering the agreement would create long-term policy uncertainty for companies.
Exxon and other big oil companies are planning long-term investments in technologies intended to fight climate change, including green hydrogen and carbon capture, while also navigating decisions about new oil and gas exploration.
Exxon and Occidental did not respond to requests for comment. Chevron and ConocoPhillips declined to comment.
Asked about the Paris withdrawal order, the president of the American Exploration and Production Council (AXPC), representing U.S. independent drillers, said it was important for U.S. industry to be part of the global climate discussion.
"It's critical that any conversation about addressing climate change must be global in nature, and also recognize that America is the world leader in both energy production and emissions reductions," said AXPC CEO Anne Bradbury.
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/trumps-climate-withdrawal-creates-rare-discord-with-big-oil-2025-01-22/