EDF Welcomes Decision by U.S., China, India, Others to Submit U.N. Climate Pledges
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Washington (Feb. 1)—The United States, China, India and 52 other nations have submitted national climate pledges to the United Nations, sending a clear signal of political will for action on climate change, U.S. non-profit group Environmental Defense Fund said Monday.
“We have all the world’s biggest polluters saying they want to work together,” said Jennifer Haverkamp, EDF’s International Climate Policy Director.” This sends a clear signal that countries intend to stay at the negotiating table. The challenge now is to translate this will into measurable action and a strong global climate treaty.”
The national pledges will be inscribed in the Copenhagen Accord – a non-binding political agreement to curb global warming brokered at the U.N. climate talks in December. The U.N. set a soft deadline of Jan. 31 for submitting pledges, but nations missing the deadline can sign up later.
“The really key countries all honored the January 31 deadline,” said Haverkamp. “The United States, China, India, Brazil, the European Union – these are the world’s biggest economies and biggest polluters. We’re looking at the leaders of the 21st century clean energy economy, and no one wants to walk away.”
The Copenhagen Accord, reached after an especially difficult session of U.N. climate talks, captured for the first time the political will of all major emitting nations to work together to halt global warming. However, as a non-binding political document, it was criticized for lacking the necessary rigor.
Despite these concerns, the accord was recognized by almost 190 nations in an overwhelming show of determination to take action on global warming. Nations were asked to join the accord by Jan. 31 by submitting voluntary pledges to curb their global warming pollution.
In a statement, the United Nations said 55 countries representing 78 percent of global energy emissions have so far submitted pledges. Pledges came from the United States, China, India, Brazil, South Africa, the European Union, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Korea, Costa Rica, Maldives, Marshall Islands and Indonesia, among others.
The next high-level meeting is slated for December in Mexico following several interim negotiating sessions in 2010.
Jennifer Haverkamp / 202-572-3392 / jhaverkamp@edf.org
Andrea Welsh/ 202-297-7723 / awelsh@edf.org
With more than 3 million members, Environmental Defense Fund creates transformational solutions to the most serious environmental problems. To do so, EDF links science, economics, law, and innovative private-sector partnerships to turn solutions into action. edf.org
Latest press releases
-
New York State of the State Highlights Opportunities Where State Can Expand Climate Action
January 13, 2026 -
A Tighter Pollution Cap is an Affordability, Economic Win for California
January 13, 2026 -
Trump EPA Finalizes Weak Rule to Reduce Dangerous Air Pollution from New Gas-Burning Power Plants, Ignores Health Benefits and Lives Saved from Pollution Reduction
January 12, 2026 -
Arizona Governor Announces New Groundwater Active Management Area to Protect Community
January 12, 2026 -
Court Rules Trump DOE Violated the Constitution When It Cancelled Clean Energy Funding in Specific States
January 12, 2026 -
Gov. Newsom’s Can-Do Budget Proposal for Zero-Emission Vehicles Will Reduce Costs and Deliver Enormous Benefits for Californians
January 9, 2026