WASHINGTON – The presidents of France and the United States issued a
joint call Monday for other nations to join them in seeking an
“ambitious” agreement to curb climate change.
Presidents Barack
Obama and Francois Hollande, writing in an article in the Washington
Post and Le Monde, called for support “in pursuit of an ambitious and
inclusive global agreement” to reduce greenhouse gas emissions “through
concrete actions” at a climate conference in Paris in 2015.
Cooperation
on a host of global issues — which include the Syrian crisis, Iran’s
nuclear program, and security in Africa — has resulted in France and the
United States enjoying a “model” relationship, the presidents wrote.
The joint opinion piece comes as Hollande travels to the United States on Tuesday for a state visit.
“Rooted
in a friendship stretching back more than two centuries, our deepening
partnership offers a model for international cooperation,” the
presidents wrote.
“Transnational challenges cannot be met by any
one nation alone. More nations must step forward and share the burden
and costs of leadership.”
Ties between the two countries have
warmed considerably since chilling over France’s refusal to support the
2003 US-led invasion of Iraq under president George W. Bush.
“A
decade ago, few would have imagined our countries working so closely
together in so many ways. But in recent years our alliance has
transformed,” the presidents wrote.
The two countries “have been
able to take our alliance to a new level because our interests and
values are so closely aligned,” they said.
Regarding climate
change, even as the United States and France “reduce our own carbon
emissions, we can expand the clean energy partnerships that create jobs
and move us toward low-carbon growth. We can do more to help developing
countries shift to low-carbon energy as well, and deal with rising seas
and more intense storms,” they wrote.(AFP)
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