Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Trump is temporary': California governor Newsom seizes COP30 spotlight

EUR -
AED 4.210618
AFN 73.378016
ALL 94.569878
AMD 421.465916
ANG 2.052746
AOA 1052.512333
ARS 1663.642959
AUD 1.634988
AWG 2.066615
AZN 1.917679
BAM 1.955642
BBD 2.308513
BDT 140.688622
BGN 1.938641
BHD 0.432254
BIF 3417.823599
BMD 1.146527
BND 1.47978
BOB 7.920394
BRL 5.920786
BSD 1.146207
BTN 108.048435
BWP 15.576333
BYN 3.184742
BYR 22471.934685
BZD 2.305124
CAD 1.622611
CDF 2637.012921
CHF 0.924881
CLF 0.026218
CLP 1031.622112
CNY 7.761191
CNH 7.783831
COP 3951.460409
CRC 519.957951
CUC 1.146527
CUP 30.382973
CVE 110.257045
CZK 24.227555
DJF 204.104384
DKK 7.474786
DOP 66.994582
DZD 153.043079
EGP 57.234527
ERN 17.197909
ETB 181.41802
FJD 2.575387
FKP 0.866674
GBP 0.86654
GEL 3.044059
GGP 0.866674
GHS 12.837018
GIP 0.866674
GMD 83.125684
GNF 10041.187965
GTQ 8.743293
GYD 239.761656
HKD 8.987358
HNL 30.66052
HRK 7.536927
HTG 149.717892
HUF 352.73943
IDR 20416.383251
ILS 3.396705
IMP 0.866674
INR 108.197607
IQD 1501.478575
IRR 1576761.641307
ISK 143.85439
JEP 0.866674
JMD 181.105354
JOD 0.812861
JPY 184.870683
KES 148.418068
KGS 100.264126
KHR 4596.508006
KMF 494.153364
KPW 1031.874953
KRW 1754.611072
KWD 0.353142
KYD 0.955098
KZT 559.34013
LAK 25313.063312
LBP 102638.847161
LKR 382.529065
LRD 208.60313
LSL 18.900572
LTL 3.385397
LVL 0.693523
LYD 7.310409
MAD 10.678836
MDL 20.240833
MGA 4825.630794
MKD 61.660668
MMK 2407.160628
MNT 4104.078481
MOP 9.253552
MRU 45.743301
MUR 54.884428
MVR 17.658804
MWK 1987.447941
MXN 19.882365
MYR 4.743417
MZN 73.274677
NAD 18.900572
NGN 1564.620224
NIO 42.176589
NOK 11.105841
NPR 172.882019
NZD 1.996895
OMR 0.440841
PAB 1.146212
PEN 3.878786
PGK 5.023594
PHP 69.63491
PKR 318.832316
PLN 4.261757
PYG 7038.492184
QAR 4.178299
RON 5.239859
RSD 117.41198
RUB 83.891655
RWF 1679.020284
SAR 4.298324
SBD 9.239056
SCR 15.647396
SDG 688.488856
SEK 10.97347
SGD 1.48031
SHP 0.855998
SLE 28.376814
SLL 24042.107996
SOS 655.047026
SRD 42.844614
STD 23730.799864
STN 24.498019
SVC 10.029189
SYP 126.728065
SZL 18.895472
THB 37.680622
TJS 10.630687
TMT 4.012845
TND 3.386926
TOP 2.760563
TRY 53.250915
TTD 7.772405
TWD 36.242074
TZS 3009.667324
UAH 51.490236
UGX 4171.662636
USD 1.146527
UYU 45.826294
UZS 13810.883108
VES 695.520894
VND 30176.598006
VUV 136.03008
WST 3.155018
XAF 655.903957
XAG 0.017705
XAU 0.000276
XCD 3.098547
XCG 2.065633
XDR 0.806808
XOF 655.909677
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.870251
ZAR 18.891562
ZMK 10320.117783
ZMW 20.545428
ZWL 369.181316
  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.37

    +0.22%

  • BCC

    3.8500

    74.66

    +5.16%

  • RBGPF

    -0.5300

    60.61

    -0.87%

  • NGG

    -1.2400

    79.44

    -1.56%

  • RELX

    -0.8300

    31.18

    -2.66%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    22.29

    0%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.67

    +0.39%

  • RIO

    -2.5900

    100.08

    -2.59%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    18.4

    -0.16%

  • VOD

    -0.2300

    14.3

    -1.61%

  • BCE

    0.0000

    23.28

    0%

  • GSK

    -1.4800

    50.67

    -2.92%

  • BTI

    -0.5800

    58.91

    -0.98%

  • BP

    -1.0400

    39.1

    -2.66%

  • AZN

    -2.9600

    174.93

    -1.69%

'Trump is temporary': California governor Newsom seizes COP30 spotlight
'Trump is temporary': California governor Newsom seizes COP30 spotlight / Photo: Mauro PIMENTEL - AFP

'Trump is temporary': California governor Newsom seizes COP30 spotlight

With US President Donald Trump skipping the UN's climate summit in the Amazon, California Governor Gavin Newsom grabbed the spotlight Tuesday and unleashed a barrage of attacks on the fossil fuel agenda of his political nemesis.

Text size:

The well-coiffed Democrat -- seen as a potential 2028 presidential candidate -- blasted Trump for twice leaving the Paris climate accord and for "doubling down on stupid" through his support of Big Oil.

Newsom said a future Democratic administration would rejoin the Paris Agreement "without hesitation."

"It's a moral commitment, it's an economic imperative," Newsom said in response to a question by AFP in Belem, the Brazilian Amazon city in northern Para state hosting the climate summit known as COP30.

It is "an abomination that he has twice, not once, pulled away from the accords."

After returning to office in January, Trump withdrew the United States from the landmark Paris deal for a second time -- the first was during his first term -- and he has sneered at the idea of human-caused planetary warming, calling it a "con job."

Newsom's first appearance of the day came alongside Helder Barbalho, governor of Para, where he touted California's green credentials between bites of tropical fruit and sips of acai juice -- noting that the Golden State, the world's fourth-largest economy, is now two-thirds powered by renewables.

He then launched into a whirlwind of meetings and press events with officials from Germany's Baden-Wurttemberg state, Brazil's minister for Indigenous Peoples and the Brazilian president of COP30 -- all the while trailed by large media scrums normally reserved for national leaders.

- Not part of negotiations -

Still, there are limits. Regional leaders have no part of official negotiations at COP30, which opened Monday with urgent calls to stay the course on climate action.

New Mexico Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham, who also attended events Tuesday, acknowledged these constraints.

"Certainly our meetings with leaders at the UN and others was to demonstrate that we're interested in any possibility that does more about that direct negotiation and representation," she said.

Her aim in coming, she added, was to show that "when the federal government leans in, we do more, and when they lean out, we do more. It's both."

But Christiana Figueres, an architect of the Paris agreement, said the summit was better off without Trump's government showing up.

"I actually think it is a good thing," she said, suggesting that while the United States may work behind the scenes with petrostates including Saudi Arabia, "they can not take the floor" and directly bully other nations.

- 'Trump is temporary' -

Even without a seat at the table, US states and cities have concrete power.

A recent analysis by the University of Maryland found that if these governments ramp up their efforts -- and a climate-friendly president is elected in 2028 -- US emissions could fall by well over 50 percent by 2035, approaching the 61-66 percent reduction targeted by Biden's administration.

"The president can't throw a switch and turn everything off -- that's not how our system works," Nate Hultman, who led the report, told AFP.

The market-driven green shift remains a strong factor including in US states with climate-hostile leadership, like Texas, the country's renewable energy generation leader last year, added Hultman, who previously worked for Democratic presidents.

Even so there are questions over how far state-level action can go without federal support. Trump's Republicans recently passed a law bringing an early end to clean energy tax credits, seen as a potentially crippling blow to the renewable sector.

Beyond pushing for more drilling at home and declaring war on green energy, Trump's administration recently torpedoed international efforts to impose a carbon tax on shipping by vowing reprisals against countries that backed the plan.

Newsom urged nations to hold firm against further intimidation efforts, saying it was vital to remember "Trump is temporary" and that "you stand up to a bully."

(K.Müller--BBZ)