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US-China Cooperation on Climate Change at COP26: Policy Implications for Environment and Energy
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Publication Year
2022-01
Journal
Journal of Safety and Crisis Management
Publisher
(사)위기관리이론과실천
Citation
Journal of Safety and Crisis Management, Vol.12 No.1, pp.7-15
Keyword
United StatesChinaclimate changeenergyCOP26
Abstract
Despite fierce strategic competition, the United States and China reached to a breakthrough agreement at COP26. This article addresses how and why the two superpowers chose to cooperate on environment and energy. Scientific evidence of global warming pressured the largest and second-largest carbon emitters to bear the responsibility and burden of climate change. <br>In addition, there has been a growing interdependence between them since the Obama administration. As the US became an oil and gas exporting country in the late 2010, the Trump administration pushed ahead with selling oil and gas surpluses to China that rapidly increased energy imports. In pursuit of a Global Green New Deal, the Biden administration made efforts to help China achieve carbon neutrality as early as possible. For China, natural gas can be a second-best option during energy transition because it emits less carbon than coal. US gas also contributes to diversifying energy imports. These mutual interests played a crucial role in insulating climate change cooperation from strategic competition.
ISSN
2234-2214
Language
Eng
URI
https://aurora.ajou.ac.kr/handle/2018.oak/35539
DOI
https://doi.org/10.14251/jscm.2022.1.7
Type
Article
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LEE, WANG HWI Image
LEE, WANG HWI이왕휘
Department of Political Science and Diplomacy
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