On this day, July 8, 1991 the United Kingdom Prime Minister John Major gave his first, brief speech about environment/global warming, at a Sunday Times.Environmental Conference.
He came about as close as any UK Prime Minister/Satrap of the 51st State can to saying “Hey, America, get your act together.”
All he could really bring himself to say was “The United States accounts for 23 percent, the world looks to them for decisive leadership on this issue as on others.”
The full text is here
“Personally, I have always thought it wrong to call it the greenhouse effect, I dislike the term, I dislike it because the image is too cosy, too domestic and far too complacent. Begonias and petunias it most certainly is not, the threat of global warming is real, the spread of deserts, changed weather patterns with potentially more storms and hurricanes, perhaps more flooding of low lying areas and possibly even the disappearance of some island states.”
The context was that the UK was about to host the G7 meeting, and the USA was digging its heels in during the negotiations for a climate treaty, slowing things down so that only the most minimal deal could be reached.
A recent trip to the US by UK Environment Minister Michael Heseltine had failed to break logjams, and Heseltine had publicly slapped down a senior US official who was trash-talking him.
Why this matters.
We always need to remember that the architecture of international law – the UNFCCC – was shaped by United States hostility to global action.
What happened next?
Major, at Rio the following year, offered to host the follow-up event, to show the UK “mattered”. And the winner was… Manchester. Ooops.