Archive for June, 2017

EU-African Union Joint Communiqu on the Implementation of the Paris Agreement – EU News

The European Union and the African Union reaffirm their strong commitment to full implementation of the Paris agreement, and call on all partners to keep up the momentum created in 2015.

Ahead of the COP23 in November they pledge to work together to finalise the Paris Agreement work programme. Climate change and renewable energy will figure on the agenda of the upcoming Africa-EU Summit in Abidjan on 29/30 November. This will be an opportunity to confirm the strong solidarity with those most vulnerable to climate change and the determination to work together to build strong and sustainable economies and societies resilient to climate change. The European Union and the African Union reaffirm their commitment to continuing to address the adverse effects of climate change on human and animal health, natural ecosystems and other social and economic impacts that threaten our developmental gains as a global community.

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EU-African Union Joint Communiqu on the Implementation of the Paris Agreement - EU News

European Union donates 300000 to aid families affected by Sri Lanka floods – Firstpost

Colombo: The European Union (EU) has allocated 300,000 euros (Rs 21,6951,00) in humanitarian funding to flood-stricken Sri Lanka, it was announced on Friday.

"This contribution from the EU will allow our partners on the ground to provide relief to the most-impacted families. This is an expression of solidarity from the European people to the people of Sri Lanka," Christos Stylianides, EU commissioner for humanitarian aid and crisis management, said in a statement.

File image of Sri Lanka floods. AP

The EU aid will focus on the most pressing needs in the aftermath of the floods, including access to clean water and sanitation facilities, provision of essential household items and emergency shelter, Xinhua news agency reported.

The death toll in Sri Lanka caused by floods and landslides reached 206 on Friday with 92 people still missing, the Disaster Management Centre (DMC) said.

Over 650,000 people have been affected while an estimated 100,000 people have been shifted to safe locations. Over 10,000 houses have also been fully or partially destroyed.

Days of severe rains since 26 May caused major floods and landslides in at least seven districts, the worst floods to hit Sri Lanka since 2003.

International assistance has also poured into the country in addition to naval teams from India, Pakistan and China.

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European Union donates 300000 to aid families affected by Sri Lanka floods - Firstpost

Emissions rise in the European Union – Buenos Aires Herald

As the world decries Donald Trumps decision to quit the Paris pact,greenhouse gas releases rise in Europe for first time since 2010

BERLIN A new report showed greenhouse gas emissions in the European Union rose in 2015, the first increase since 2010, even as European officials decried the United States decision to quit a global climate pact.

Emissions grew by 0.5 percent compared with 2014, mainly due to increases from transportation and a colder winter, the European Environment Agency said.

Greenhouse gases are a major contributor to man-made climate change and most countries around the world have pledged to reduce emissions under the 2015 Paris Agreement.

The report was released as the EU is trying to emphasise its commitment to combatting global warming, with senior European officials appealing unsuccessfully to US President Donald Trump not to quit the Paris accord.

The former reality TV star announced from Washington yesterday that the United States would be quitting the Paris accord, before declaring that under the Trump administration it will continue to be the cleanest and most environmentally friendly country on earth, a claim that experts immediately ridiculed.

Higher emissions were caused mainly by increasing road transport, both passenger and freight, and slightly colder winter conditions in Europe, compared to 2014, leading to higher demand for heating, the European Environment Agency said.

It noted that improvements in fuel efficiency failed to offset the growth in traffic.

Road transport emissions about 20 percent of total EU greenhouse gas emissions increased for the second year in a row in 2015, by 1.6 percent, the agency said.

It noted, however, that the EU has achieved a long-term reduction in greenhouse gas emissions from 1990 to 2015 of 22.1 percent despite economic growth of 50 percent.

This decoupling of economic growth from emissions during the 25-year period occurred due to a mix of green policies, such as encouraging the use of renewable energy and improving fuel efficiency, and changes in European economies that have seen a shift away from heavily polluting industries toward service jobs.

Milder winters have also contributed to a decline in heating fuel use, the agency said.

Herald with AP

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Emissions rise in the European Union - Buenos Aires Herald

Is Pakistan Pulling China into Afghanistan? – The American Interest

Senior U.S. intelligence officials are warning thatthe India-Pakistan rivalry could pullChina into Afghanistan.First Posthas the highlights:

Pakistan is concerned about international isolation and sees its position through the prism of Indias rising status, including New Delhis expanded foreign outreach and deepening ties to the US, said National Intelligence Director Dan Coats

Pakistan will likely turn to China to offset its isolation, empowering a relationship that will help Beijing to project influence in the Indian Ocean, the Dawn quoted Coats as saying. []

Pakistan desires for Afghanistan some of the same things we want: a safe, secure, stable Afghanistan. One addition there is no heavy Indian influence in Afghanistan, said Defence Intelligence Director Lt General Vincent Stewart.

They view all of the challenges through the lens of an Indian threat to Pakistan. So they hold in reserve terrorist organisations so that if Afghanistan leans towards India, they will no longer be supportive of an idea of a stable and secure Afghanistan that could undermine Pakistans interests, the General said.

The basic geopolitical dynamics here are hardly new: Pakistan has long worried about Indias influence in Kabul, and not without reason. William Dalrymples2013 essayon the three countries deadly triangle lays outa fuller picture. China is the freshingredient, however, and its role is going to be closely watched by an Indian leadership already wary of its growing involvement in South Asia.

As the United States ponders sending an additional 5,000 troops to the countrya number that increasingly seems perfectly calibrated to do very little to tip the balance decisivelythe situation on the ground could be getting messier still.

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Is Pakistan Pulling China into Afghanistan? - The American Interest

Walter Jones talks debt, health care, need to leave Afghanistan at Rotary meeting – Kinston Free Press

Dustin George Staff Writer, The Free Press

The Department of Defense spent $6 million on a flock of goats to promote goat farming and industry in Afghanistan. Unfortunately, no one knows where those goats are or if they are even still alive.

Seven hundred thousand for one goat that you can buy right here in Lenoir County for $50. How ridiculous that tax payers money should be spent that way," said Congressman Walter B. Jones, R - Farmville, during the Kinston meeting of the Noon Rotary club.

Jones, who also represents Lenoir County in the House of Representatives, used the mystery goats as just one of a multitude of examples of wasteful spending in Afghanistan as part of his pitch to get American troops out of the country.

"Youve got people living right here that need help from Hurricane Matthew but yet we can find all these billions of dollars that we cant pay for to go to foreign countries," he said.

Calling Afghanistan the "graveyard of empires," Jones said he feels that after 16 years, it is time for America to pull its troops out of the country.

"We are trying to change a part of the world that doesn't want to be changed," he said.

Speaking to The Free Press after his presentation, Jones said he has been petitioning House leadership since the days of John Boehner, who left Congress in 2015, to hold a debate on America's future in Afghanistan.

He recently co-sponsored a resolution to have such a debate in the House of Representatives and said he's written multiple letters to House Speaker Paul Ryan about the issue, but hasn't made much headway.

You have 300 members of Congress today that were not there (in 2001). They werent part of the debate," he said.

Jones, who was in Congress in 2001, said he still believes the U.S. was correct to invade Afghanistan in pursuit of Osama Bin Laden, though he believes it was a mistake to invade Iraq in 2003.

Jones told The Free Press, Speaker Ryan - or someone writing Jones on the speaker's behalf - has told him the Speaker is looking to committees for guidance and promising to do a better job of monitoring the expense of keeping troops in Afghanistan.

We havent done a better job of monitoring the expense for 16 years. Its a joke," Jones said. We didnt want to know how you are going to manage the money. Give us a debate on our responsibility of sending a young man or woman to die.

Getting America out of Afghanistan is, Jones said, part of a bigger responsibility the government has to deal with the current national debt, which is approaching the $20 trillion mark.

That debt, he believes, could one day become a bigger threat to American security than any outside faction.

People say we will wait on the next generation of children to deal with it. Thats not fair to them," he said.

The debt problem isn't just the fault of one political party over the other, Jones said, calling out Democrats and Republicans in Congress for "spending money we don't have in the bank" each year.

When it comes to the failure of the Republican Party to create substantial health care reform, however, Jones was quick to call out his own party.

Following the inauguration of President Donald Trump, Jones said he wanted to see congressional representatives spend two months holding meetings across the country to learn from constituents what was liked and disliked about the Affordable Care Act by the people covered by the law, then use that feedback to craft a new law to replace it.

But what did we try to do? Jam it in three weeks. Jam a bill of such importance in just three weeks. Many of us didnt even know the cost of it," he said.

Jones was quick to point out he was one of only 12 Republicans in the House of Representatives to vote against the American Healthcare Act. After the bill passed the House of Representatives, the Congressional Budget Office estimated it would leave 23 million Americans without health insurance.

The failures of that bill, Jones said, were indicative of a larger problem in Congress today.

"This is probably one of the most confused sessions of Congress Ive seen since Ive been there, talking about the first five months," Jones told The Free Press.You get one moment that the healthcare bill is dead and then they work it out of course, thats the leadership of the House and Senate. It comes back and you pass a bill that the Senate says they arent going to take it up anyway. So we pass a bill, I didnt vote for it as you well know. Then the president who talks about tax reform and gives you a one pager, nobody can figure that out. Its just a confused time.

While he couldn't say exactly what a health care bill would have to contain to earn his support, Jones did say he wants something that covers pre-existing conditions for patients."

Dustin George can be reached at 252-559-1077 or Dustin.George@Kinston.com.

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Walter Jones talks debt, health care, need to leave Afghanistan at Rotary meeting - Kinston Free Press