How the planet's two largest greenhouse gas emitters navigate climate policy.
The United States and China together account for a disproportionate 45 percent of global carbon dioxide emissions. In 2014, then-President Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping announced complementary efforts to limit emissions, paving the way for the Paris Agreement. And yet, with President Trump's planned withdrawal from the Paris accords and Xi's consolidation of poweras well as mutual mistrust fueled by misunderstandingthe climate future is uncertain. In Titans of the Climate, Kelly Sims Gallagher and Xiaowei Xuan examine how the planet's two largest greenhouse gas emitters develop and implement climate policy. Through dispassionate analysis, the authors aim to help readers understand the challenges, constraints, and opportunities in each country.
Gallaghera former U.S. climate policymakerand Xuana member of a Chinese policy think tankdescribe the specific driverspolitical, economic, and socialof climate policies in both countries and map the differences between policy outcomes. They characterize the U.S. approach as deliberative incrementalism; the Chinese, meanwhile, engage in strategic pragmatism. Comparing the policy processes of the two countries, Gallagher and Xuan make the case that if each country understands more about the other's goals and constraints, climate policy cooperation is more likely to succeed.
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