Cooperation on climate wanted in US

US voters have placed a climate-centered partnership at the top of their wish list for potential collaboration with China, and strongly support healthy competition between the countries to develop clean energy technologies, a poll has found.

"Voters overwhelmingly support the United States working with China to address climate change and reduce greenhouse gas emissions, even when presented with a stance against this partnership," the Asia Society Policy Institute said in a report based on a survey of more than 1,000 voters in early December.

The February report, Understanding American Voter Attitudes Toward US-China Climate Cooperation, found that 56 percent of voters believe that climate change is a global problem, and the US should form a partnership with China to address it. Just over a quarter of voters don't want such a partnership.

"Though support is strongest among Democrats (71 percent) and independents (59 percent), more than a third of Republicans (35 percent) also express their support, which indicates there is potential for bipartisan consensus on this issue," the report said.

Partnering with China on addressing climate change garnered support from the voters even more than on a global COVID-19 response, but less than on reducing the number of nuclear weapons, according to the poll.

Given the twin crises of the worldwide economic downturn caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and climate change, voters support President Joe Biden working with China and other countries to create a green global stimulus by a 33-point margin-59 percent for and 26 percent against.

In addition to cooperation, the survey also found that a mutually reinforcing, healthy cycle of competition could likely unfold between the world's top two greenhouse gas emitters.

When asked if the US should do the same if China decides to take more actions to address climate change and transition to clean energy, such as ramping up production of solar panels and electric vehicles, an overwhelming majority of voters, 69 percent, said yes.

China has the largest number of new-energy vehicles in the world, and for many years has been a global leader of renewable energy in the number of patents, investment, installed capacity and power generation, according to Xie Zhenhua, China's special representative on climate change affairs.

ALSO READ: Bill Gates: China makes climate change fight more affordable

Climate change, combating the pandemic and improving public health … are examples of where cooperation will be necessary, not just for the world's interests, but to secure each other's national interests as well.

Kevin Rudd, president and CEO of Asia Society

Bipartisan divide

The Asia Society poll found that support turned out to be strongly bipartisan: 85 percent of Democrats, 60 percent of independents and slightly more than half of Republicans all think the US should remain competitive with China and scale up production of clean energy technologies if China does so.

The report noted that though Republican voters are "significantly" less supportive than Democrats on working with China on climate change, Biden's team can be tactful in its messaging to break through to those hesitant Republican voters.

Kevin Rudd, Asia Society president and CEO and Asia Society Policy Institute president, said even amid escalating competition, Washington and Beijing will need to find room for continued strategic cooperation on critical global challenges in a number of defined areas.

"Climate change, combating the pandemic and improving public health … are examples of where cooperation will be necessary, not just for the world's interests, but to secure each other's national interests as well," said Rudd, a former Australian prime minister.

At a virtual meeting of the United Nations Security Council on Tuesday, Xie said China remains committed to multilateralism and win-win cooperation.

"We humans are in one community with a shared future in face of the climate challenge," he said.

READ MORE: UN: Two-thirds of 1.2m polled call climate change 'global emergency'

Contact the writer at huanxinzhao@chinadailyusa.com