By Philip Rossetti
Thursday, December 04, 2025
The annual United Nations climate negotiation meeting,
the Conference of the Parties (COP), ended last month. Unsurprisingly, the
event was
widely summarized as disappointing. In a particularly apt metaphor for the
U.N.’s dysfunction, a pavilion at the event caught fire. But what
caught my eye was the inevitable post-summit blame directed at Republicans for
global climate inaction. A Politico
piece about the COP stated (emphasis added), “U.S. President Donald Trump
is the most obvious avatar for the geopolitical shifts confronting the
talks.” Dear me, an avatar for the geopolitical shifts?
Hyperbole aside, there is plenty to dislike about Trump’s
climate posture. But it’s not the reason for the COP’s many shortcomings. The
global climate movement’s real weakness stems from negotiators’ desire to foist
climate burdens on the United States while offering nothing in return. While Politico
noted that the absence of a U.S. delegation at the COP was an “elephant in
the room,” the real elephant in the room is China’s surging emissions. Since
2005, the U.S. has cut greenhouse gas emissions more than any other nation, and
if COP delegates want to deal seriously with Washington, they must reckon with
the need for burden sharing.
As my fellow Dispatch Energy contributor Roger
Pielke Jr. recently
highlighted, the U.N. and media outlets alike often incorrectly credit the
Paris Agreement for a massive cut in projected emissions. The truth, Pielke
explains, is that the initial emissions projections were wildly off-base, and
the Paris Agreement has likely had almost no impact on the actual trajectory of
emissions.
Similarly, data reveals a big disconnect between what is
said at the COP and what is happening on the global stage. While Democrats,
foreign
governments, and academics
have criticized the United States’ withdrawal from the Paris Agreement, the
truth is that from 2005 to 2019, we cut
carbon dioxide emissions more than every other developed nation combined.
Even amid Trump’s purge of climate regulations during his first
administration, strong evidence shows that competitive
energy markets in the U.S. continue to drive greenhouse gas abatement.
This is in part because economic growth yields efficiency
that in turn lowers emissions. So while climate-focused policies may lower
emissions, they may do so at an economic cost, which forgoes the emission
reductions that naturally come from a more energy-efficient economy. A good
example of this phenomenon is the Obama administration’s Clean
Power Plan. The limits on carbon pollution from power plants never took
effect due to a Supreme Court ruling, but the U.S. nevertheless beat its
emission targets a
decade early primarily thanks to more efficient natural gas production.
These results were delivered by the free market, not regulation, but had the
framework been implemented, Democrats would have inevitably credited it.
Meanwhile, the world’s largest greenhouse gas emitter,
China, has significantly increased its carbon footprint. From 2005 to 2019, for
every metric ton of emission decline in the United States, China increased
its own emissions by 3.74 metric tons.
| Chart via Joe Schueller. |
China accounts
for more than half of the world’s coal use. And while Beijing’s
construction of renewable-energy power plants and electric vehicles is often
praised
in the media, China has also been rapidly building new coal power plants,
hitting a 10-year
high for new coal plant construction last year. Call me crazy, but I’m
doubtful China is investing billions of dollars into new coal projects just to
retire them soon. (Though some
on the left argue that their coal plants are better than ours,
so we shouldn’t worry about their massive share of emissions.) Ultimately,
blaming Republicans for climate woes while praising China stands at odds with
observable truth.
Given this context, Republican frustration with the
dynamics of global climate policy is understandable. In a normal world, the
nations making the most progress toward resolving a collective action problem
would be praised while those falling behind would be chastised. But the dynamic
is inverted for climate issues, and a reluctance to acknowledge the necessity
of burden sharing is off-putting to many Republican policymakers.
The climate strategy of making demands of the United
States and the West while giving the rest of the world a pass is not a new
phenomenon—before the Paris Agreement, there was the 1997 Kyoto
Protocol (KP). The KP was the first major international climate treaty, and
unlike the Paris Agreement, it set out firm targets for participants to meet.
But the protocol did not seek equal commitments from all participants; instead,
it divided the world into wealthy industrialized nations and poorer developing
ones. Only the wealthy nations, like the United States, had to meet certain
obligations, while other countries, like China, had none. Emission targets were
pegged to 1990 levels, so former Soviet states met them by default due to the
Soviet Union’s industrial collapse. The KP, put simply, asked Western nations
to commit to climate action while exempting U.S. rivals. Unsurprisingly, the
Senate never ratified the protocol, and when President George W. Bush later
declined to participate, the Guardian featured
the headline: “Bush kills global warming treaty.”
The Paris Agreement was supposed to rectify these
problems by asking nations to set their own voluntary targets. One might think
this could have been an opportunity for the U.S. to negotiate directly with
other big emitters for a reciprocal agreement. Yet what President Barack Obama
revealed in a 2015 joint
statement with China was that the United States would cut emissions by 26
to 28 percent, and China would agree to “peak” emissions by 2030. This deal
amounted to “I’ll gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today,” but at the
time was praised
as groundbreaking.
Recognizing that this deal would never pass muster with
the then-Republican-held Senate, the Paris Agreement was crafted so the
administration could claim that it did
not require ratification. Some legal scholars even argued
that the international provision in the Clean Air Act gave Obama all the
authority he needed to set any target he wanted under the Paris Agreement and
regulate to meet it, circumventing Congress entirely. Unsurprisingly, fear of
that regulatory tactic was what prompted Republicans to announce plans to withdraw
from the Paris Agreement the first time back in 2017.
This U-turn should have taught future presidents that
they need to win over the public if they want international climate accords to
have staying power. Yet when it was President Joe Biden’s turn in 2021, he
largely pursued the same approach as Obama, making big promises while getting
nothing in return from other global emitters. My
own analysis of his administration’s target under the Paris Agreement found
that of all the promised cuts from new pledges that year, 71 percent of the
reduced emissions would have come only from the United States.
In short, it is foolish to expect Republicans who were
sidelined from climate negotiations and policymaking under two administrations
to uphold Democrat-championed climate deals. But it’s particularly so given
those administrations’ reluctance to push other countries to share in their
ambitious emissions reduction goals.
To be clear, I have defended
the Paris Agreement. It has potential as a negotiating tool that can
circumvent the conventional barriers to global climate treaties and secure
agreements that advance the interests of the United States. But the “elephant
in the room” is not the reluctance of a large share of Americans to blindly
support poorly negotiated emissions targets. It’s that nations like China,
Russia, and India are given a pass for their dismal climate performance.
It wasn’t long ago that even climate hawks like John
Kerry expressed
frustration with the COP’s direction when it started focusing less on
emissions abatement and more on ideas like “climate reparations.” And while
Beijing is being praised for potentially
peaking its emissions “early,” China’s projected 2025 emissions are about 20 percent higher than
when it made the joint statement with Obama. Simply put, if COP delegates want
more climate action from the United States, they must reckon with the need for
reciprocity.
I applaud the intent of the COP, and I’ve defended
the United States’ continued involvement in it. But climate hawks should be
honest with themselves: Trump’s climate denial is not
the source of the COP’s failures.
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