France’s newly elected president, Emmanuel Macron, promised to be a climate leader during his campaign. To fulfil that pledge, he must use his new status to persuade the United States to stay in the Paris Agreement, Andy Rowell writes for Oil Change International.
Donald Trump was quick to take to Twitter to congratulate the centrist candidate Emmanuel Macron on his resounding victory against the far-right, Marine Le Pen, in the French presidentialย race.
On Monday, Trump said: โCongratulations to Emmanuel Macron on his big win today as the next President of France. I look very much forward to working withย him!โ
As usual with Trump, the tweet is a U-turn from his previous position which was qualified support for the far-right Le Pen. There is no doubt that Trump wanted Le Pen toย win.
And as theย Guardianย noted: โThe defeat of Le Pen pricks the bubble of populism that had swept the UK with Brexit and the US with the rise of Trump, and as such may have adverse knock-on effects for the new incumbent of the Whiteย House.โ
One of those issues Macronโs win will impact Trump and where the two have to work together is climateย change.
The new French President is on record as hoping toย persuade Trumpย not to pull the US out of the Paris climate agreement and the two men look set to clash on theย issue.
Although we must remember that Macron is hardly a progressive politician, but an ex-investment banker centrist, the new President has also laid down a provocative marker against Trump on climate. In February this year he released a video onย climate change, when he tweeted, โThis is a message for American researchers, entrepreneurs, engineers, working on climateย changeโ.
Macron invited them to โcome to France to join European and French researchers to work on climate change here. Because here you areย welcome.โ
He added: โI do know how your new President now has decided to jeopardise your budget, your initiatives, as he is extremely sceptical about climate change.โ He went on to say: โI have no doubt about climate change and how committed we have to be regarding thisย issue.โ
Macron went on with two messages, the first to French scientists: โWe will preserve our budgets, we will reinforce our public and private investment in order to do more and accelerate our initiatives to deliver in line with COP-21.โ
The second message was a direct appeal to climate scientists under attack from the Trump Administration. โCome to France! โYou are welcome. It is your nation. We like innovation. ย We want innovative people. We want people working on climate change, energy, renewables, and new technologies. France is yourย nation.โ
Whether any climate scientists move to France remains to be seen. What we do know is that France is a divided nation. And Macron will do well to heal the countryโs obvious wounds. But Macron also has to stand up against Trump on climate and persuading him to keep the US in the Paris agreement would be a positiveย start.
This article was original published by Oil Change International. Main image credit:ย Gouvernement franรงaisย CC BY–SA 3.0 FR
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