âI believe President Bidenâs Build Back Better bill will be historic. But I know Joe Biden wanted to do even more,â Obama said. âBoth of us have been constrained by the fact that one of our two major parties have decided to not only sit on the sidelines, but express hostility towards climate science and make climate change a partisan issue.â
âThatâs got to stop. Saving the planet isnât a partisan issue. I welcome any faction within the Republican Party that takes climate change seriously,â Obama added.
He said climate change will affect all Americans and everyone on the planet, no matter how they voted.
âIt doesnât matter if youâre a Republican or a Democrat if your Florida house is flooded, or your crops in the Dakotas are failing, or your California house is burning. Nature, physics, climate science â they donât care about party affiliation,â Obama said. âWe need everybody â even if we disagree on other things. â
___
THE HAGUE, Netherlands â The Dutch government is joining a group of nations, including the United States and Canada, that has pledged to stop funding overseas fossil fuel projects.
It was not immediately clear how much Dutch funding will be affected. Last week, national broadcaster NOS reported that the government was guarantor in 2020 for loans financing fossil fuel projects overseas of more than 4.5 billion euros.
The decision was announced Monday as the United Nations climate summit in Glasgow entered its second week with key issues still unresolved.
State Secretary for Finance Hans Vijlbrief called the move âan important accelerationâ and a âmajor step in the right direction to counter climate change.â Prime Minister Mark Rutte told reporters in The Hague that his caretaker administration had decided over the weekend to halt the financing.
Outlining the move in a letter to the Dutch parliament, the government said it will âprioritize the transition to a green energy supply with its foreign instruments and will work on new policy in 2022 to end international government support for the fossil energy sector.â
The Dutch branch of Greenpeace welcomed what it called an âunavoidable step.â
Last month, the Netherlandsâ biggest pension fund announced it will stop investing in fossil fuel companies.
___
GLASGOW â Ministers from all over the world are arriving in Glasgow to begin the âarduous taskâ of finding consensus, said Alok Sharma, who is chairing the two-week U.N. climate talks in the Scottish city.
He said the priority is for there to be a âsense of urgency,â while ensuring the talks are transparent and inclusive.
âWeâve no time to lose,â he said.
Sharma said countries had made commitments thatâll help the planet, but they had to be delivered and accounted for.
Patricia Espinosa, head of the U.N. climate office, said the world was coming into these talks with the âclear picture that weâre not there.â But at the same time, scientists say that itâs still possible to achieve the worldâs climate goals, like limiting future warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit). They say that will mitigate the effects of global warming, such as increasing doughts, extreme weather, wildfires and rising seas.
âWe need to accelerate the process going forward,â she said.
___
GLASGOW â After a week of negotiations, numerous of the stickiest issues in climate talks remain unresolved and teams of cabinet ministers from different countries are being sent to move things along.
Briefing the United Nations Conference of Parties, or COP26, on the first weekâs progress, COP President Alok Sharma had to correct himself, noting that âsomeâ issues had been settled, rather than âmany.â
Numerous developing nations were pessimistic. They called progress âdisappointing,â saying announcements were high in quantity but worried that they were low in quantity.
No deals have been made yet on the three main goals of the U.N. â pledges to cut emissions in half by 2030 to keep the Paris climate dealâs 1.5 degree Celsius temperature rise goal alive; the need for $100 billion annually in financial help from rich countries to poor ones; and the idea that half of that money goes to adapting to global warmingâs worst effects. Several other issues, including trading carbon and transparency, also werenât solved yet.
And on the issue of more frequent updates of countriesâ emission-cutting goals â something poorer nations seek â negotiators listed nine different time options for future negotiators to choose from.
Sharma named teams of two ministers â one from a rich country, one from a poor â for each issue to oversee negotiations on each topic.
GLASGOW â Rich nations are not being truthful in their commitments to climate change, delegates from developing nations said Monday.
Not fixing the financial pledge problem â the need for $100 billion annually in financial help from rich countries to poor ones to cope with climate change â shows rich nationsâ pledges are âan empty commitment,â and without fixing that the climate talks in Glasgow cannot be successful, representatives from several countries, including Guinea, said.
âThere is a history of broken promises and unfulfilled commitments by developed countries,â Diego Pacheco Balanza of Bolivia told the conference.
___
Follow all AP stories on climate change at https://apnews.com/hub/climate.