WASHINGTON — The 2015 Paris climate agreement is not the boogeyman that punishes the United States that critics such as President Donald Trump claim. But it hasn't quite kept the world from overheating either.
The Paris agreement is a mostly voluntary climate pact originally written in ways that would both try to reduce warming and withstand the changing political winds in the United States.
In his first hours in office, Trump started the year-long process to withdraw from the pact. It's the second time he's done it — then-President Joe Biden had the U.S. rejoin on his second day in office.
Once the withdrawal takes effect next year the United States joins Iran, Libya and Yemen as the only United Nations countries that are not part of the agreement.
The U.S. withdrawal, while expected, triggered heavy reactions from around the world. That's because the United States is historically responsible for the largest share of heat-trapping gases in the atmosphere, has been a leader in international climate negotiations and is the world's largest producer of the fossil fuels that cause the problem in the first place.
When the agreement was signed Dec. 12, 2014, then-President Barack Obama called it ''the best chance to save the one planet we have."
What is the Paris Agreement?
The main goal is to keep long-term global temperatures from warming 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial times and if not that well below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees) by slashing planet-warming emissions from coal, oil and gas.