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White House: US won't send any officials to COP30 Climate talks

A White House official confirmed that the U.S. would not be sending any high-level officials for the upcoming COP30 Climate Summit in Brazil. This will ease some concerns among world leaders who were worried Washington might send a team of negotiators to sabotage the talks. Brazil will host the high-level leaders summit in Belem, Amazonian City next week. The UN climate talks begin there two weeks later.

Earlier this week, the U.S. warned that it would use visa restrictions and sanction to retaliate to nations who voted in favor of a UN shipping agency plan, the International Maritime Organization (IMO), to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by ocean shipping.

Those tactics led a large majority of countries to vote at the IMO in favor of delaying by a full year a decision regarding a global price for carbon emissions on international shipping. According to the White House official, President Donald Trump made clear his views on multilateral climate actions in his speech last month at the United Nations General Assembly. He called climate change "the world's greatest con job" and criticised countries for setting up climate policies which "have cost them fortunes."

The White House official said in an email that "the President is directly engaging leaders around the globe on energy issues. You can see this from the historic peace and trade deals, all of which have a strong focus on energy partnership." In its trade negotiations, the Trump administration has sought bilateral energy agreements to increase U.S. LNG exports. Chris Wright, the U.S. Energy secretary, said on Friday that there was "room for a great deal of energy trade between China & the United States," given China's demand for natural gas during the tariff negotiations. Trump announced his decision to withdraw from the Paris Climate Agreement, which has been in place for 10 years. This will take effect in January 2026. The State Department is reviewing the U.S. engagement in multilateral agreements. The U.S. pressured other countries involved in a global agreement to reduce plastic pollution earlier this year to not support an agreement which would limit plastic production. The White House official said that "the tide has turned" in terms of prioritizing climate changes, pointing out a memo that was circulated by Bill Gates this week, a billionaire investor and climate philanthropist who stated that it is now time to shift away from meeting global temperature targets and that climate will not "lead to humanity's destruction." (Reporting and editing by David Gregorio; Valerie Volcovici)

(source: Reuters)