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Scientists: U.S.-China pact won't slow warming much

WASHINGTON - Don't expect the landmark U.S.-China climate change agreement to nudge the world's rising thermostat downward much on its own, scientists say.

WASHINGTON - Don't expect the landmark U.S.-China climate change agreement to nudge the world's rising thermostat downward much on its own, scientists say.

While they hail it as a start, experts who study heat-trapping carbon dioxide don't see the deal, announced Wednesday in Beijing, making significant progress without other countries joining in.

The math shows that even with the agreement, the globe is still rushing toward another 2-degree temperature rise - a level that world leaders have pledged to avoid as too dangerous.

China, the world's No. 1 polluter, will still increase its emissions until 2030 or so, under the agreement. The United States, which ranks second, promised to cut pollution from the burning of coal, oil and gas to levels that haven't been seen since 1969. But whatever cuts the U.S. makes will be swamped by the Chinese growth in pollution over the next 15 years.

"It doesn't change things much," said Glen Peters, a Norwegian scientist who was part of the Global Carbon Project international team of researchers that tracks and calculates global emissions every year.

"This is not far off the business as usual" scenario the world is already on, he said.

In 2009, countries across the globe set a goal of limiting global warming to about another 2 degrees Fahrenheit (1 degree Celsius) above current levels. Peters' team calculated earlier this fall that the world would hit that mark around 2040 and the U.S.-China accord doesn't change that, he said.

The numbers are just too big, especially out of China.

MIT professor John Sterman, who runs computer simulations of global emissions, likened the numbers to a driver with his foot all the way down on the accelerator in the fog heading toward a cliff. While this agreement helps, it's only letting up on the pedal, not slowing the car.

"It doesn't buy a lot of time for when we blast through the 2-degree level," Sterman said.

It may help in the long run when emission cuts pile up, he said, "but by then you've locked in sea-level rise, you've locked in more extreme weather, water shortages and declines in agricultural output."

World leaders forged the first international treaty to combat global warming in Kyoto, Japan, in 1997. But developing countries, including China and India, were not required to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and that caused a big rift. The United States signed the agreement, but did not ratify or honor it.

After only nonbinding goals were adopted in 2009 in Copenhagen and a U.N. summit earlier this year, international leaders are now aiming to forge a follow-up agreement in Paris in late 2015.

After Wednesday's announcement, Climate Interactive, a group that makes projections on emissions, ran simulations that showed the new agreement will mean about 700 billion tons of carbon dioxide will be kept out of the air by 2100, reducing expected cumulative carbon pollution by about 8 percent.