Mythili Sampathkumar, for The Independent
Nov 8, 2017: France’s president Emmanuel Macron has not invited US President Donald Trump to a climate change summit this December in Paris. LUDOVIC MARIN/AFP/Getty Images
US President Donald Trump is not invited to a climate change summit to take place in Paris later this year “for the time being”.
An official in French President Emmanuel Macron’s administration told Reuters that the US has “a bit of a special status for that summit.”
The US has begun the official withdrawal process from the Paris Agreement, the global accord signed by nearly 200 countries in December 2015 that attempts to curb greenhouse gas emissions and limit global warming rise to 2C.
Former President Barack Obama signed and joined the deal with an executive order in 2016 to bypass climate deniers in Congress.
One the President’s campaign promises was to get the US out of “unfair” deals like the Paris accord that he said puts American workers – especially in coal industry – at an “economic disadvantage.”
The withdrawal would only be eligible to take effect on 4 November 2020 per the rules outlined in the agreement, just days before the next presidential election.
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The day of the announcement in June of this year, Mr Macron and leaders from Germany and Italy banded together to say in a statement that despite Mr Trump being open to changing the Paris Agreement, it could not “be renegotiated since it is a vital instrument for our planet, societies and economies.”
Over a thousand American governors, mayors, and CEOs also said they would stick with the commitments outlined in the accord as well.