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Biden Administration International Affairs Personnel Tracker

John Kerry

Special Presidential Envoy for Climate

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John Kerry is a veteran diplomat, having been a Vietnam soldier, U.S. senator for 25 years, 2004 presidential nominee, and the US Secretary of State (2013-2017) who helped create the 2016 Paris Climate Accord, among other agreements. He founded World War Zero, a bipartisan organization that aims to get the U.S. to net zero emissions by 2050 and, in the last few years, Kerry has led sustainability programs on climate change and oceans at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

The creation of the new cabinet-level position dedicated to climate change was welcomed by many, but it also brought many questions on what the role entails. Nominating veteran diplomat John Kerry for the position has caused most to view the new position as a major foreign policy influencer and one to help the U.S. regain its credibility on climate change issues. Kerry is well-connected to both his fellow nominees and other foreign diplomats, among whom he reportedly has a “deeply impressive” reputation, which is leaving observers to predict he will be very capable in his goal to help the U.S. regain global leadership on climate change.

His now-flipped hierarchical status with Biden’s secretary of state Antony Blinken, Kerry’s former deputy secretary of state, also has some observers and advisors concerned how the two roles will balance foreign affairs responsibilities as Kerry would be reporting to Blinken, not the president. The unclarified limits of the new role could complicate Biden’s overall China policy.

Views On China

As a lead producer of CO2 emissions, Kerry sees working with China—and other producers of carbon emissions like India and the European Union—as a necessary step towards healing the global climate. He was recently described as “an optimistic centrist with a long-held interest in tackling climate change who likes to build alliances.” Kerry has recounted times when he has worked closely and successfully with Chinese counterparts on climate issues, both around and before the 2016 Paris Agreement, and, while he believes in Beijing’s commitment to improving the global climate crisis, Kerry also believes that global accountability and U.S. leadership on climate change agreements is necessary for success.

At his 2013 confirmation hearing, Kerry discussed how China should be both a competitor (in trade) and a partner (specifically on North Korea and climate change) to the U.S., also showing signs that he was unconvinced of the need for a military ramp-up and ‘Pivot to Asia’ at the time. People’s Daily described Kerry in 2013 as one who “stresses more on coordination rather than confrontation in foreign relations.” For instance, in 2013, Kerry helped develop a climate plan with Chinese officials as part of a Working Group. 

When asked about the ability to work with China while facing competition on other issues:

They were a partner on climate as we competed with them at other things during the Obama administration. We’ve been there, done that…Right now there are major challenges with respect to some of the things that China is doing. China banks are still funding coal-fired power production, new plants in various countries that are touched by the One Belt, One Road program. So we have to talk to China about that. But we have to do it in a way that doesn’t force people into a corner to hunker down and head towards conflict.

Since taking office, Kerry has approached China’s vast over-representation in global carbon emissions with extreme urgency. He has travelled to China twice within the year, and notably declared in June that “without sufficient [carbon emissions] reduction by China, together with the rest of us, the goal of 1.5 degrees is essentially impossible.”

At the end of 2021, Kerry was criticized by some for his lack of hardline approach to the Chinese, both regarding climate change issues and regarding forced labor, the latter of which Kerry reportedly has overseas investment relations with. Other congressmen have found fault with Kerry, accusing him of lobbying against the Uyghur Human Rights Act.

John Kerry gallivants across the world on his private jet in the name of climate change, while Uyghur Muslims are held in reeducation camps and subjected to forced labor in the name of profit margins for the CCP. Which is more important?

Following the November 10, 2021 “U.S.-China Joint Glasgow Declaration on Enhancing Climate Action in the 2020s” made with his Chinese counterpart Xie Zhenhua, Kerry commented on his overarching views of U.S.-China relationship:

The United States and China have no shortage of differences, but on climate, cooperation is the only way to get this job done. This is not a discretionary thing, frankly. This is science. It’s math and physics that dictate the road that we have to travel.

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Page Last Updated: January 11, 2022

*None of the personnel in this tracker are associated with the Institute for China-America Studies. All images used on this page are sourced from the official Biden-Harris transition website buildbackbetter.gov or the public domain.*