Relations (1)

cross_type 2.32 — strongly supporting 4 facts

China is actively involved in international efforts to address global climate change, as evidenced by its bilateral cooperation with the United States [1], [2] and its regional agenda with ASEAN [3]. Furthermore, collaborative mechanisms involving China are identified as essential for achieving global progress on climate change mitigation [4].

Facts (4)

Sources
Advancing U.S.-China Coordination amid Strategic Competition - CSIS csis.org CSIS 2 facts
claimThe CSIS report asserts that if the United States and China do not find ways to coordinate on transnational challenges like food security, public health, and climate change, the consequences will include uncured diseases, worsening environmental catastrophes, increased stress on food systems, greater migration, and a higher likelihood of global conflicts.
quoteSteve Davis, chair of the project’s advisory council, stated: “game-changing opportunities for social impact across health, climate change, and food security are within reach, but [they] will depend on new mechanisms and narratives that enable collaborations between partners in the United States and China to proceed in smart, informed, and geopolitically sensitive ways.”
How China is responding to escalating strategic competition with the ... brookings.edu Ryan Hass · Brookings 1 fact
claimWang Yi, the Foreign Minister of China, outlined a 2021 China-ASEAN agenda focused on defeating COVID-19, bolstering economic recovery, and pushing forward poverty reduction, disaster prevention, climate change, and environmental protection.
U.S.-China Relations cfr.org Council on Foreign Relations 1 fact
claimThe United States and China have maintained a bilateral relationship characterized by periods of both tension and cooperation regarding trade, climate change, and Taiwan since 1949.