Macron: EU 'Mad' to Do Trade Deal With US After Paris Climate Withdrawal

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By Arthur Neslen, Climate Homeย News

French president Emmanuel Macron has warned the EU would be โ€œmadโ€ to sign a trade agreement with countries that refused to honor the Paris climateย agreement.

BRUSSELS โ€” Macron was speaking a day after the Irish Taoiseach, Leo Varadkar, implored Trump to consider โ€œa new trade deal between the US and the EU,โ€ as a way of lowering trade tensions over steel and aluminum tariffs.

Speaking at a conference in Brussels, Macron said that since Trump had indicated US withdrawal from the Paris deal, a new trade deal would undermine clean energy producers in Europe, and project a message of weaknessย abroad.

Far from bending to the will of the US, โ€œtrade agreements should reverse the burden of proof,โ€ Macron said. โ€œThey should be a way of spreading our standards. Anyone who signs an agreement with the EU should be committing to put the Paris Agreement intoย practiceโ€ฆ

โ€œWe even go beyond our own rules and ask our own economic agents to do the same. Why should we sign a trade agreement with powers that say they donโ€™t want to implement the Paris Agreement? We would be mad [to doย so].โ€

Macron said that the worldโ€™s multilateral rules-based trade policy was โ€œthreatened by unilateralย temptations.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not in favour of showing any softness to those who decide to break those rules,โ€ he said. โ€œWe can no longer pursue objectives that work against our own [climate] policies inside our ownย borders.โ€

EU: โ€˜No new trade deals with countries not in Parisย Agreementโ€™

Doing so would โ€œdiscourageโ€ Europeโ€™s clean energy investors who might suffer from unfair competition as a result, heย added.

The French leader also made an impassioned plea for a European carbon floor price, and a border tax to prevent cheap, carbon-intensive products entering the EU market which could undermine cleaner localย producers.

Macron called for the EUโ€™s budget โ€” currently being negotiated โ€” to increase the fifth of budget spending currently earmarked for climate measures. This is likely to upset some other EU states, such as Poland, which has painted climate action as a drag on economicย growth.

โ€œIn the [European] Council debate, we have to set an objective that none of the expenditure is hostile to the climate,โ€ he said. โ€œSetting climate spending at 40% of the budget would be ambitious compared to today but I think we can achieveย it.โ€

Macronโ€™s oration brought what would normally have been a staid sustainable finance conference to its feet for a one minute standing ovation, with attendees enthralled at the sight of an EU leader โ€˜walking the walkโ€™ in the face of Trumpian assault onย Paris.

โ€œI think heโ€™s right,โ€ Christiana Figueres, the former UN climate chief told Climate Home News immediately after hearing Macronโ€™s comments linking trade deals to the Paris accord. โ€œWhat more can Iย say?โ€

Last month, CHN reported the French foreign minister, Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne, said that if Trump withdrew the US form the Paris agreement, there would be โ€œno trade agreement โ€” the U.S. knows what toย expect.โ€

That position was subsequently backed up by the European Commission and the practice is already implemented in some of the EUโ€™s latest trade deals. Macronโ€™s comments on Thursday were the first time a European head of state has referred to theย precondition.

Earlier in the day, the UNโ€™s special climate envoy, Michael Bloomberg, told the conference that under Trump, Washington was โ€œout of sync with the national zeitgeist but it mattersย less.โ€

U.S. cities and regions representing emissions roughly equivalent to the UK, France, and Germany combined remained committed to the Paris Agreement, heย said.

In a bid partly intended to reverse the shortfall in climate funding caused by the U.S.โ€™s reneging on Obama-era spending commitments, the Global Covenant of Mayors issued a new funding call inย Brussels.

Multilateral banks, including the EIB, EBRD, and World Bank, appealed to states, pension funds, and investment houses for $200 million to fund developing cities and $600 million for enhanced creditย financing.

This sum could then be leveraged up to $6 billion, according to Cristiana Fragola, a director of theย covenant.

โ€œIf pension funds โ€” most of which spend just one-two percent of their funds on climate action โ€” were to allocate even a minor portion of their assets to this call, we could really move the needle substantially,โ€ she told CHN.

This article originally appeared on Climate Home News.

Main image: Donald Trump and Emmanuelย Macron Credit: Left, Gageย Skidmore, CC BYSA 2.0,ย Right, LeWeb,ย CC BYย 2.0

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