Sadly this is not a new question, and history offers some
important lessons. In 2001 the world faced a similar dilemma. After former
vice-president Al Gore lost the 2000 election to George W. Bush, the newly
inaugurated president walked away from the Kyoto Protocol, the previous global
pact to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
That sent shockwaves around the world, and left nations
facing a choice about what to do in the United States’ absence – something they
may face again next year. The choice was made more difficult because the US
withdrawal made it less likely that the Kyoto Protocol would ever come into
force as a legally binding agreement.
Read the thoughts of the Vice Chancellor’s Postdoctoral
Research Fellow from the University of New South Wales, Christian Downie, on The Conversation - “Why China and Europe should form the world’s most powerful ‘climate bloc’.”
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