Obama: U.S. To Lead On Climate So China, India Follow
Date: 03-Apr-09
Country: UK
Obama: U.S. To Lead On Climate So China, India Follow Photo:
Jason Reed
President Barack Obama speaks during a news conference at the G20 Summit in
London, April 2, 2009.
Photo: Jason Reed
LONDON - U.S. President Barack Obama said on Thursday the United States
would "lead by example" in combating climate change so that developing
nations such as India and China would follow suit.
Speaking at the G20 meeting of major economies, he used his presidential
debut on the world stage to contrast his policies with those of former
President George W. Bush, who had twinned U.S. action to curb climate
greenhouse gases with pressure on emerging economic powerhouses.
"China and India ... justifiably chafe at the idea that they should somehow
sacrifice their development for our efforts to control climate change,"
Obama told a news conference at the conclusion of the London summit.
He told reporters he had pledged U.S. climate leadership in a meeting with
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
"We talked about ... how important it is for the United States to lead by
example to reducing our carbon footprint so that we can help to forge
agreements with countries like China and India."
Obama said that developing countries such as China, the world's top carbon
emitter, must also act on the climate, but used a light touch which may bode
well for U.N. talks meant to forge a new climate treaty in Copenhagen in
December.
"If China and India with their populations had the same energy usage as the
average American then we would all have melted by now," he said.
Developing countries say that the developed world has earned its wealth from
more than two centuries of industrialization, spewing carbon dioxide into
the atmosphere in the process from burning fossil fuels like coal and oil.
They say the North must act first and help pay the bill for carbon cuts in
the South.
The main outcome of the G20 summit was a $1 trillion pledge to rescue the
global economy. Leaders also re-affirmed a previous commitment to sign a
U.N. climate deal this year, and accelerate the transition to a greener
economy.
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