France urges Europe and the United States to agree on common green finance rules after talks with Climate Envoy John Kerry
By Leigh Thomas
PARIS, March 10 (Reuters) - Europe and the United States should agree on common rules to determine how "green" a financial investment is, France's finance minister said on Wednesday, after talks with U.S. President Joe Biden's climate envoy John Kerry.
Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said it was also important to launch discussions with Washington on carbon border tax adjustments.
"I proposed to (Special Envoy) John Kerry that Europe and the United States have an identical taxonomy," Le Maire told a news conference. "It would be a shame if at the end of the day we had two sets of rules in Europe and the United States."
"That would be a source of considerable confusion between our two continents."
Asked to respond to the separate suggestion of a carbon border adjustment tax, Kerry said Washington was aware that a number of countries were investigating such a tool.
Such a tax essentially consists of import fees levied by carbon-taxing countries on goods manufactured in non-carbon-taxing countries.
"There are a number of different proposals to assign a price on carbon and the methane and the greenhouse gases creating this damage. Whether or not we think that's the right tool or not, we have not yet been able to sit down and evaluate that," Kerry said.
PARIS ACCORD
Former U.S. president Donald Trump pulled the world's second-largest greenhouse gas emitter out of a 2015 global pact to fight climate change brokered in Paris. Hours after being sworn in in January, Biden used a presidential decree to sign back up.
Kerry said the world's largest emitters of greenhouse gases were "not sufficiently on the road to meeting" the Paris accord's target of limiting global warming to well below 2°C, preferably 1.5°C, above pre-industrial levels.
The special envoy said major economies needed to "make sure that the pathway to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 remained a real option". India, Japan, Russia and Brazil are also all under pressure to commit to faster emissions cuts.
"The president (Biden) has already set that goal. He believes that is the target," Kerry said.
An estimated $2.5 trillion to $4 trillion would be needed over the next three decades to transition to an environmentally sustainable global economy, Kerry added.
Asked if he was disappointed that China had announced a new five-year plan that analysts say will see its emissions rise, Kerry said: "It's not just about China. We all have to do this."
(Additional reporting by Benoit Van Overstrateten and Geert De Clercq; Writing by Richard Lough; Editing by Jan Harvey, Toby Chopra and Gareth Jones)