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Global climate change talks start under shadow of Trump’s views
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Global climate talks started today in Baku, Azerbaijan, a major oil and gas producing country that borders Russia and Iran on the Caspian Sea.
The annual meeting is a chance for world leaders, as well as scientists, activists and corporate executives, to hash out plans to rein in global warming, and to prepare communities for threats they already face from rising temperatures. But Donald Trump’s return to the presidency in the United States, the biggest historical contributor of greenhouse gas pollution heating the planet, raises questions about whether the country will continue working on global climate initiatives.
At the end of last year’s conference in Dubai, negotiators struck a breakthrough agreement for countries to transition away from fossil fuels, the chief source of heat-trapping pollution. But Trump has promised to boost U.S. fossil-fuel production.
And even before Trump reclaimed the White House, the United Nations warned that efforts to curb climate pollution are far off track. Global emissions rose to a new record in 2023, and scientists in the European Union say it’s “virtually certain” that 2024 will be the hottest year on record.
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Writing is on the wall for the US at COP29 --BBC
US envoy vows to fight for climate change with 'passion and belief' despite Trump win
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Today the new US envoy John Podesta put on a brave face, calling out president-elect Donald Trump's view that climate change is a hoax. He said the US team here, working under President Joe Biden's direction, will continue to work hard.
But everyone in Baku can see the writing on the wall - Trump will call the shots for the next four years so any US promises made here could be torn up in just over two months.
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