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On climate change, China and US are on the same page

The leaders of both countries are expected to announce landmark agreement to ratify Paris accord, opening the door to a binding international treaty

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People walk past a G20 themed poster in Hangzhou. Photo: Xinhua

The climate-change accord reached in Paris last year is gathering critical momentum towards the goal of global action. In one stroke, ratification by 23 signatories accounting for just 1 per cent of global emissions is set to jump by nearly 40 per cent of emissions, within reach of the 55 per cent of emissions from at least 55 countries required before the agreement can come into force as a binding international treaty.

This will result from the inclusion of emissions attributable to China and the United States. President Xi Jinping and President Barack Obama are expected to jointly announce ratification of the landmark pact by Beijing and Washington ahead of the G20 summit of major economies in Hangzhou this week. Senior climate officials from both countries worked late into the night in Beijing in recent days to finalise details.

This is not just a massive boost to hopes of transforming the accord into concrete action to limit potentially catastrophic global warming. It also lifts China’s prospects of hosting a summit that will be remembered for agreement rather than conflict. There are many contentious issues for the G20, especially economic and trade topics, but the climate accord is one every country can agree on.

If the Xi-Obama deal is announced before the summit, the G20 will open on a positive note.

The pact agreed by 195 countries in Paris last December aims to keep the increase in global average temperatures over pre-industrialisation levels to well within 2 degrees Celsius.

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