What's new? Obama unveils global climate plan

President Barack Obama. At the Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. Obama unveiled the plan to tackle climate change, pledging to cut carbon pollution among other initiatives. Photo by: Steve Jurvetson / CC BY

Short on specifics and new international initiatives: A much-hyped plan to tackle climate change, unveiled Tuesday by U.S. President Barack Obama, relies heavily on administrative action and less so on the dim hope of legislative reform by a bitterly divided Congress.

Obama unveiled the plan at Georgetown University in Washington, during a speech the White House described as his most significant climate change speech to date.

The president pledges to cut carbon pollution and prepare U.S. communities for the impacts of climate change, among several domestic initiatives. But central to Obama’s plan is also the forging of closer ties abroad, and especially with emerging economies and bilateral donors such as China, India and Brazil, according to a 21-page document circulated with the media.

The plan, although short on specifics and time tables, is meant to restart a debate on climate change mitigation and adaptation that has seen many stops and starts in recent years. Whether it will set in motion a flurry of activity on Capitol Hill and beyond remains to be seen.

Obama promises to:

Obama also promises that the Unites States will take a more active role in climate change negotiations, particularly through the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change.

Alliage Morales contributed reporting.

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