免费看黄色大片-久久精品毛片-欧美日韩亚洲视频-日韩电影二区-天天射夜夜-色屁屁ts人妖系列二区-欧美色图12p-美女被c出水-日韩的一区二区-美女高潮流白浆视频-日韩精品一区二区久久-全部免费毛片在线播放网站-99精品国产在热久久婷婷-午夜精品理论片-亚洲人成网在线播放

Japan says U.S. exit from 2015 Paris climate accord "very disappointing"

Source: Xinhua| 2019-11-05 16:23:48|Editor: xuxin
Video PlayerClose

TOKYO, Nov. 5 (Xinhua) -- Japan on Tuesday described procedures being made by the United States to withdraw from the 2015 Paris climate accord as being "very disappointing."

"Creating a decarbonized society is a pressing issue and the U. S. move is very disappointing," Environment Minister Shinjiro Koizumi told a press briefing on the matter.

"It'd be impossible to urge President Donald Trump to reverse the decision," Koizumi added.

The United States, a world's major carbon dioxide emitter, said on Monday that it had sent its formal notice to the United Nations of its wish to withdraw from the accord.

The procedure for the United States to withdraw from the landmark pact, the successor to the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, is expected to take about a year.

In December 2017, Trump expressed his intention to pull the United States out of the pact to combat global warming and keep a global temperature rise this century "well below" 2 degrees Celcius above preindustrial levels, to limit the increasing occurrences of floods, droughts, glaciers and ice caps melting, rising sea levels, and rising numbers of typhoons and hurricanes.

Trump at the time said the pact, adopted at a U.N. conference on climate change in Paris, was unfair to the United States and has maintained his stance on this, leading to the majority of leaders at a Group of 20 summit in Osaka here earlier this year pledging to move forward with the accord, while Trump doubled-down on his intention to leave creating a rift on the topic.

Japan's top government spokesperson on Tuesday also expressed his disappointment at the decision made by the United States to leave the landmark pact, stating that addressing global warming necessitates the cooperation of the entire international community.

"In view of the G20 Osaka summit declaration, we will explore ways to cooperate with the United States to address the issue of climate change," Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told a press briefing.

Suga, while stating that the United States is the world's second largest greenhouse gas emitter, also noted the world's largest economy is also at the forefront of introducing innovative, cutting edge environmentally-friendly technologies and solutions.

TOP STORIES
EDITOR’S CHOICE
MOST VIEWED
EXPLORE XINHUANET
010020070750000000000000011100001385303911