How Climate Treaties Benefit China

A new report from the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI) demonstrates how China takes advantage of international climate treaties at the U.S. expense

The report, titled “Forcing the UN’s Hand on China,” takes aim at China’s designation as a “developing” country in the eyes of the United Nations despite its status as the world’s second-largest economy.

That classification gives China more leeway and time [to comply] with international climate standards, while the U.S., a “developed” country with the largest economy in the world, is tied to more stringent compliance timelines and standards under the same treaties.

China’s status as a developing nation in U.N. treaties has created an unfair advantage over the U.S. and other developed nations,” said Ben Lieberman, a senior fellow for CEI and the report’s author. “Congress should use the power of the purse to stop the U.S. from being disadvantaged compared to China.”

The report details the history of China’s “developing” status in terms of U.N. climate agreements, which traces back to the Montreal Protocol of 1987.

That agreement was a major move to reduce the prevalence of chemical compounds that purportedly deplete the ozone layer, with China receiving special considerations because the U.N. classified it as a “developing” state, the report reads.

More than 35 years later, that designation has not been updated, according to Lieberman’s report.

The Senate ratified a subsequent expansion of the Montreal Protocol, known as the Kigali Amendment in 2022 despite China being granted more lenient compliance timelines and the ability to access financial aid funded by the U.S. and other “developed” nations.

While Republican Sens. Mike Lee of Utah and Dan Sullivan of Alaska successfully passed an amendment to the Kigali Amendment ratification mandating that the State Department request the U.N. change China’s status to “developed,” Lieberman contends that the measure is not enough.

“While a welcome first step, Congress needs to affirmatively block the continued implementation of these treaties until the change is made,” he wrote in his report.

The same disadvantages caused by China’s “developing” status hold for the 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, a U.N. climate agreement focused on ‘greenhouse gas’ emissions, Lieberman explains in his report.

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    Tom

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    Other countries make these silly climate agreements while China continues to pollute the environment. No way is China going to stop building coal plants and stop making toxic chemicals.

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