How Trumpâs âdrill, baby, drillâ pledge is affecting other countries
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The UN climate summit in the United Arab Emirates in 2023 ended with a call to âtransition away from fossil fuelsâ. It was applauded as a historic milestone in global climate action.
Barely a year later, however, there are fears that the global commitment may be losing momentum as the growth of clean energy transition is slowing down while burning of fossil fuels continues to rise.
And now there is US President Donald Trumpâs ânational energy emergencyâ, embracing fossil fuels and ditching clean energy policies â that has also begun to influence some countries and energy companies already.
In response to Trumpâs âdrill, baby, drillâ slogan aimed at ramping up fossil fuel extraction and the US notifying the UN of its withdrawal from the Paris climate agreement, Indonesia, for instance, has hinted that it may follow suit.
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âIf US is not doing it, why should we?â
âIf the United States does not want to comply with the international agreement, why should a country like Indonesia comply with it?â asked Hashim Djojohadikusumo, special envoy for climate change and energy of Indonesia, as reported by the countryâs government-run news agency Antara.
Indonesia has remained in the list of top 10 carbon-emitting countries for years now.
âIndonesia produces three tons of carbon [per person a year] while the US produces 13 tons,â he asked at the ESG Sustainable Forum 2025 in Jakarta on 31 January.
âYet we are the ones being told to close our power plants⊠So, where is the sense of justice here?â
Nithi Nesadurai, director with Climate Action Network Southeast Asia, said the signals from her region were concerning.
She said the richest ârichest country and the largest oil producer in the worldâ increasing its production gives other states âan easy excuse to increase their own â which they are already doingâ.
In South Africa, Africaâs biggest economy and a major carbon emitter, a $8.5bn foreign-aided transition project from the coal-sector was already moving at a snailâs pace, and now there are fears that it may get derailed further.
Wikus Kruger, director of Power Futures Lab at the University of Cape Town, said there was a âpossibilityâ that decommissioning of old coal-fired power stations would be âfurther delayedâ.
However he said that while there was some âwalk backâ from transition to renewables, there was still growth in the clean energy sector that was expected to continue.
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Argentina withdrew its negotiators from the COP29 climate meeting in Baku last November, days after Trump won the US presidency. It has since followed Trumpâs lead in signalling it will withdraw from the Paris Agreement of 2015 â which underpins global efforts to combat climate change.
âWe now expect our oil and gas production to go up,â Enrique Viale, president of Argentine Association of Environmental Lawyers told the BBC.
âPresident Milei has hinted that he intends to withdraw from the Paris Agreement and has said the environmentalism is part of the woke agenda.â
Meanwhile, energy giant Equinor has just announced it is halving investment in renewable energy over the next two years while increasing oil and gas production and another oil major BP is expected to make similar announcement soon.
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âAmerican energy all over the worldâ
Trump has not just said âdrill, baby, drillâ but he has also said: âWe will export American energy all over the world.â
Potential foreign buyers are already lining up.
India and the US have agreed to significantly increase the supply of American oil and gas to the Indian market.
At the end of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modiâs US visit on 14 February, the two countries issued a joint statement that âreaffirmedâ the US would be âa leading supplier of crude oil and petroleum products and liquified natural gas to Indiaâ.
A few days after Trumpâs inauguration, South Korea, the worldâs third largest liquified natural gas importer, has hinted its intention to buy more American oil and gas aimed at reducing trade surplus with the US and improving energy security, international media have reported from Seoul.
Officials with Japanâs largest power generator, JERA, have told Reuters they too want to increase purchase of liquefied natural gas from the US to diversify supply as it currently imports half of it from the Asia Pacific region.
âThere is certainly a threat that if the U.S. seeks to either flood markets with cheap fossil fuels, or bully countries into buying more of its fossil fuels, or both, the global energy transition might be slowed,â said Lorne Stockman, research director with Oil Change International, a research and advocacy organisation for transition to clean energy.
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Scientists have said there can be no new fossil fuel extraction and there needs to be a rapid reduction of carbon emissions (around 45% by 2030 from 2019 level) if the world is to limit warming to 1.5 Celsius compared to pre-industrial period.
âThe economics of energy supply are a key driver of decarbonization,â said David Brown, director of energy transition practice at Wood Mackenzie, a global energy think-tank.
âThe resource base of US energy supports the role of natural gas and liquids production. By contrast, import-dependent economies such as China, India, and those in Southeast Asia have a dramatic economic incentive to decarbonise sources of energy.â
Global energy transition investment has surpassed $2tn for the first time last year but studies have also shown that the growth of clean energy transition has markedly slowed in recent years while many major banks continue to finance fossil fuels.