Secretary of state says countries investing in new coal ‘will hear from US’

Antony Blinken says Biden administration will challenge those failing to cut 
reliance on coal as Scott Morrison emphasises costs of action

US secretary of state Antony Blinken has warned countries investing in new 
coalmines they will be challenged by the Biden administration.

By Daniel Hurst Foreign affairs and defence correspondent  Tue 20 Apr 2021 
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/apr/20/secretary-of-state-antony-blinken-countries-investing-new-coal-will-hear-from-us-climate-action


The Biden administration is ready to challenge countries whose inaction on the 
climate crisis is setting the world back, including those that fail to cut 
their reliance on coal, the top American diplomat has warned.

The US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, called for much stronger action to 
address global heating over the course of this decade, hours after Australia’s 
prime minister, Scott Morrison, continued to emphasise the costs of acting on 
climate change.

The prime minister told the Business Council of Australia on Monday evening 
that net zero emissions would not be achieved by “taxing our industries that 
provide livelihoods for millions of Australians off the planet”.

(‘No action on anything’: Australia increasingly isolated as US and others ramp 
up climate ambition)

“We’re not going to achieve net zero in the cafes, dinner parties and wine bars 
of our inner cities,” Morrison said, adding it would be “achieved by the 
pioneering entrepreneurialism and innovation of Australia’s industrial 
workhorses, farmers and scientists”.

Morrison is among 40 leaders invited to join a virtual climate summit hosted by 
Joe Biden later this week.

Blinken’s speech in Maryland on Tuesday morning Australian time was part of an 
attempt to build momentum for countries to commit to stronger climate action, 
including more ambitious 2030 targets.

Without naming any particular countries, Blinken said the US state department 
would “weave” the climate crisis into the fabric of everything it did.

“Our diplomats will challenge the practices of countries whose action – or 
inaction – is setting the world back,” Blinken said.

“When countries continue to rely on coal for a significant amount of their 
energy, or invest in new coal factories, or allow for massive deforestation, 
they will hear from the United States and our partners about how harmful these 
actions are.”

Blinken said the US would “seize every chance we get to raise these issues with 
our allies and partners and through multilateral institutions”.

While there was no direct reference to Australia in the speech, the Australian 
government has continued to promote the future of coal and members of the 
Nationals have been pushing for new coal-fired power plants.

With the US expected to unveil a new 2030 emission cut before Biden’s summit, 
Blinken said: “We need the whole world focused on taking action now and through 
this decade to promote the achievement of net zero global emissions by 2050.”

To date, the Australian government has resisted pressure to strengthen its 
target of a 26% to 28% cut in emissions by 2030 (compared with 2005 levels) – 
but argues the target “is a floor on Australia’s ambition”, meaning it hopes to 
do better.

Morrison reaffirmed on Monday evening that his government’s policy was to reach 
net zero “as quickly as possible and preferably by 2050”. He is yet to formally 
commit to that goal.

With the Morrison government expected to face increased international pressure 
over the climate crisis, analysts say Australia will not be able to “fly under 
the radar”.

On Monday night, Morrison argued Australia was “doing its heavy lifting in our 
part of the world” and was seeking to improve the viability of new technologies.

“Don’t let it be said by those who want to talk Australia down in what we’re 
doing on emissions that we’re not carrying our load. We are, and we are leading 
the way,” Morrison said.

“It is this practical approach of making new technologies commercial that will 
see not only us achieve our goals, but those we work with around the world, in 
the developing economies of the world. And without taxing the life out of 
industries that are a source of high wage jobs to so many Australians, 
especially in regional areas.”

The Labor leader, Anthony Albanese, will tell a clean technology and jobs event 
on Tuesday that Australia cannot afford “further drift and time-wasting” when 
it comes to the transition to renewable energy because there is “huge 
potential” to create hundreds of thousands of secure, well-paid jobs.

The US withdrew from the Paris agreement when Donald Trump was president, but 
Biden rejoined as soon as he took office, and the new president is seeking to 
press countries to take stronger action against what he has warned is an 
“existential threat”.

In February Biden’s climate envoy, John Kerry, publicly acknowledged past 
“differences” between the United States and Australia in tackling the climate 
crisis while calling for a faster exit from coal-fired power.

(Joe Biden's climate envoy admits US and Australia not on 'same page')

Blinken said on Tuesday the climate crisis was fuelling national security 
threats – but it would be a mistake to think about the issue only through the 
prism of threats. The US secretary of state pointed to opportunities for 
American innovation, industry and jobs.

The US government was mindful that, despite the opportunities of climate 
change, “not every American worker will win out in the near term”, and would 
ensure coal workers were not left behind during the transition, Blinken said.

Despite the US and China pledging last weekend to cooperate on tackling the 
climate crisis, Blinken said the Biden administration would not treat “other 
countries’ progress on climate as a chip they can use to excuse bad behaviour 
in other areas that are important to our national security”.

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