The Biden administration is set to back a plan that would crush the coal industry at the upcoming United Nations (UN) climate summit, Reuters reported on Tuesday.
The U.S. will reportedly support a French plan to get the countries of the world to ban private financing of coal-fired power plants during the upcoming UN conference, known as COP28, according to Reuters. [emphasis, links added]
The plan is likely to drive a rift between countries like the U.S. and France and those like China and India, which are reliant on coal to feed their economies with cheap and reliable electricity.
The proposed plan would allow the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) to set coal standards for private financing companies that would allow regulators, rating agencies, and non-governmental organizations to track coal financing, according to Reuters.
The U.S., the European Union (EU), and Canada have been working together to assemble a strategy for phasing out coal, which they view as the leading threat to achieving international climate targets, according to Reuters.
Approximately 73% of the electricity consumed in India is generated using coal, according to Reuters, and China permitted an average of two new coal plants each week in 2022, according to an analysis conducted by the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air.
“France has no coal, so their position banning it is easy. The U.S., on the other hand, has the largest coal reserves— by far— in the world,” Dan Kish, a senior research fellow for the Institute for Energy Research, told the Daily Caller News Foundation.
“Coal is the leading source of electricity in the world. All this does is make the rest of the world that is trying to get affordable electricity for their people align themselves with China and against the U.S. Uncle Sam is once again made to look like a dunce under Joe Biden.”
India is reportedly likely to push back against the proposal, or any other proposal to set a deadline for a fossil fuel phase-out, according to Reuters.
Indian delegates may reportedly push representatives of developed countries like the U.S. and France to become carbon negative, rather than merely carbon neutral, by 2050 to keep targets within grasp.
Beyond the reported plan to strangle private financing for coal plants, delegates are expected to discuss the shape and stipulations of a so-called “loss and damages” fund, a de facto international climate reparations program, at COP28.
Special Presidential Envoy for Climate John Kerry recently suggested that the U.S. will pay “millions” into the fund, a number that many activists and representatives of poorer countries find to be inadequate.
China is unlikely to have any significant obligations to the fund because it is classified as a developing country, despite its status as the world’s top emitter and second-largest economy.
COP28 is scheduled to begin on Nov. 30 and run through Dec. 12.
Read more at Daily Caller
If the ban on private financing of coal fired power plants comes to pass millions in Africa and other under developed nations will remain in the dark. However, no resolution at COP 28 is going to slow down the increase use of coal in China and India.
John Kerry might commit the U.S. to paying millions into the international climate reparations program, but under the US Constitution all spending must be authorized by Congress.
Biden the Democrat/Globalists/Traitor makes Dirty Deals with China this should be more grounds for his Impeachment