Biden sends John Kerry to China

The US climate envoy John Kerry will travel to Shanghai this week, the US State Department announced, marking the first trip of a member of the Biden administration to China.

The former US diplomat will travel to Shanghai and then to Seoul, South Korea from April 14-17 to prepare the forthcoming Joe Biden Climate Summit (April 22-23) and the Glasgow COP26 Climate Conference in November; clarified the State Department in a statement.

John Kerry “will discuss major global climate goalsBefore these two meetings, according to the announcement.

US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken and Joe Biden’s National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan welcomed the first “difficult” but “constructive” talks with China in March, following two days of meetings in the United States.

Without denying that there are “significant differences”, The highest-ranking Chinese Communist Party diplomat, Yang Jiechi, also hailed the “honest, constructive and helpful” talks.

It was the first direct contact between the United States and China since the arrival of John Biden in the White House on January 20.

Following his inauguration, the Democratic president expresses his intention to continue the tough stance taken by Donald Trump’s Republican predecessor towards China, while cooperating with it on global challenges such as the climate.

Joe Biden has invited Chinese President Xi Jinping, among the 40 world leaders invited, to attend the (online) climate summit.

“China is a very important player in the issue of climate change,” John Kerry said in an interview with India Today last week.

“We hope that China will participate and lead the efforts, we want to work with China on this,” he added, while acknowledging “disagreements on some issues.”

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