Today, millions of American voters will head to the polls to decide where the United States stands on the fight against climate change.
While presidential candidate Joe Biden has declared climate change the “number one issue facing humanity” and announced a $2-trillion clean energy plan to tackle the crisis, many worry that another four years under President Donald Trump – who has repeatedly denied climate science and shunned global climate efforts – will sound a death knell for the environment.
November 2016: United Nations Climate Change Conference, COP22, Marrakesh, Morocco
Donald Trump, who had called global warming a hoax, has just been elected president of the United States.
Shock, scorn and disbelief echo around the halls of the United Nations climate conference in Marrakesh. Some younger activists are even in tears.
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“My heart is absolutely broken at the election of Trump,” Becky Chung, a delegate for youth advocacy group SustainUs from California, tells a journalist.
She goes on to correctly predict: “We will see a rising up of people’s movements committed to keeping fossil fuels in the ground.”
November 2017: UN Climate Talks, COP23, Bonn, Germany
Trump has pulled out of the Paris Agreement and is ripping apart Obama-era environmental regulations. But at this year’s conference, there is defiance in the air.
A growing coalition of US states, cities and organisations called We Are Still In set up camp, even as Trump is determinedly walking away from the fight against the climate crisis.
I interviewed Todd Stern, Obama’s chief climate negotiator. He told me the Trump presidency would be a blip, a set-back for sure, but temporary. The sentiment was that the world would march on in the fight against climate change with or without Trump.
December 2018: UN Climate Talks, COP24, Katowice, Poland
White House representatives arrive at this year’s climate talks to promote coal and other fossil fuels. They are obviously out of step with the mood, as an important group of investors managing $32 trillion in assets call for an end to coal as a source of energy.
Greta Thunberg, the 15-year-old climate activist, takes the stage to castigate world leaders for their lack of concerted action.
December 2019: UN Climate Talks, COP25, Madrid, Spain
Naturalist Sir David Attenborough speaks at the opening ceremony and says climate change is humanity’s greatest threat for thousands of years.
Trump, meanwhile, continues his term rollback of auto emissions standards, opening up the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to drilling, and rejecting stronger air pollution standards.
November 2020: UN Climate Talks, COP26, Planned for Glasgow, Scotland
The 2020 conference is cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It is now set to take place in November 2021.
Record temperatures and ongoing wildfires from California to Brazil – plus hurricanes and cyclones, floods and landslides, and ongoing ice melt – continually demonstrate the urgency for action. Yet across the world, there is a sense we could be on the brink of a substantial change in the way we live, as renewables kick in and the pressure builds on fossil fuel usage.
But the outcome of the US election is critical.