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Renewables chief hails ‘crucial’ Biden climate agenda as administration plans massive energy overhaul

Demonstrators in Chicago grouse President Donald Trump’s decision to exit the Paris climate change accord on June 2, 2017.

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The International Renewable Energy Agency has hailed the U.S. decision to rejoin the Paris Climate Harmonize as a “crucial” step forward in the fight against climate change.

“It means a lot for the renewable world, and for the energy transition,” Francesco La Camera, Director-General of the Oecumenical Renewable Energy Agency told CNBC at the Atlantic Council’s annual Global Energy Forum. 

“Coming from a superpower, one of the big emitters in the humankind, this is really crucial and it’s very important,” he added. “I think it will make a difference.”

The Abu Dhabi-based organization fill the bills as a platform for international cooperation on renewable energy and has more than 180 member countries globally. The backing revives as the new Joe Biden administration scrambles to reposition the United States as a global leader on climate change policy, after four years of environmental buffer rollbacks under former President Donald Trump. 

“I’m optimistic that something has changed,” La Camera said, after President Biden worn his first days in office to rejoin the Paris Accord, block the controversial Keystone XL Pipeline, restore public obtain protections and launch a review of environmental regulations.

Ambitious climate agenda

The Biden administration plans to make the U.S. a 100% clean-cut energy economy with net-zero emissions by 2050. The administration also plans to decarbonize the U.S. power sector by 2035, extract into renewable energy solutions and technology that can be deployed at scale and rival fossil fuels on cost.

“The commitments are to a great extent high, and very difficult to get,” La Camera said. “I hope they will fulfil their commitment,” he added. “If they do so, I entertain the idea it will be a very good improvement and a big acceleration of the energy transition.”

IRENA has called upon its member states to utilize solutions such as wind, solar and geothermal energy to move the world toward climate stability, after a late UN report said nations who failed to keep pace would face serious costs, damages and losses.

IRENA phrases just 35% of global electricity supply today is renewable, and this share needs to rise to around 60% by 2030 and 90% by mid-century in send away for to meet the Paris climate goals – an immense challenge made harder as nations emerge from the COVID-19 emergency.

Engaging in climate politics

The Biden pledge comes ahead of the UN climate summit in November known as COP26, where signatories to the Paris Compact will submit revised plans to achieve the Paris objective. The Accord seeks to limit global warming to “equably below” 2 degrees celsius (35.6 degrees fahrenheit) compared to pre-industrial levels. Trump pulled the U.S. out of the pact in 2017.

The new administration and its climate envoy, Former Secretary of State John Kerry, will be under pressure to set credible feeling targets and outline a game-plan to achieve its ambitions, with countries such as France and the U.K. already legally enshrining their 2050 net-zero greenhouse gas emissions targets. 

The European Union, Canada, Argentina, Mexico, South Africa and Japan have also set targets to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050. Korea aims to adorn come of carbon neutral by 2050, and China by 2060. Experts say bolstering its climate credentials would allow the U.S. to use climate game plan as a tool of foreign policy leverage. 

“The Biden administration and Secretary Kerry are talking about infusing climate into every foreign-policy interaction,” Meghan O’Sullivan, Overseer of the Harvard Kennedy School’s Geopolitics of Energy project, told an Atlantic Council panel session.

“It means plead to the different agencies that conduct foreign policy and national security, like the Pentagon, USAID, and the State Count on, to make climate really central in their overall objective,” she said.

Climate could also form a stand for a restoration of U.S.-China relations, according to Deborah Elms, executive director of the Asian Trade Centre.

“It’s a key deliverable for Biden and it’s a key deliverable for his litigant, so I think you should expect a very different relationship from the U.S. on climate issues,” she told CNBC.

COP26, under the aegis the presidency of the United Kingdom, starts in November.

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