As the United States withdraws from the Paris Agreement and other key UN climate bodies under President Trump, a Swiss NGO is urging the Swiss government to step up its own climate efforts. Experts call the US move a 'bitter blow' to climate justice and criticize Switzerland's own delays on climate finance as 'irresponsible'.

"It is a more serious step definitely. The world loses a lot and it is very damaging."
"International cooperation will not collapse because the UNFCCC has 195 members rather than 196."
The United States has shattered global climate norms, formally exiting the Paris Agreement on January 27, 2026, and becoming the sole nation to abandon the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). This unprecedented withdrawal is part of a sweeping dismantling of environmental policy under President Trump, who has labeled climate change a "hoax" and initiated a pullout from 66 international organizations. The move leaves a gaping void in global leadership, releasing the world's second-largest emitter from critical obligations to report emissions or finance treaty work. While the White House claims these bodies "no longer serve American interests," the international community views this isolationism with alarm. Johan Rockstrom of the Potsdam Institute describes the exit as "very damaging," confirming that the world loses a critical partner at the most precarious moment in climate history.
The repercussions of the American exit extend far beyond diplomacy; they strike at the heart of climate justice. Delia Berner, a leading expert at the Swiss NGO Alliance Sud, condemns the move as a "bitter blow" to the developing world. The Trump administration's simultaneous freeze on foreign aid threatens to obliterate nearly 10% of global climate finance—funds essential for vulnerable nations to survive a warming planet. This financial vacuum creates a crisis of confidence. With the US abdicating its historical responsibility, the burden shifts violently onto remaining wealthy nations. The withdrawal is not merely a political maneuver; it is a direct threat to the mechanisms designed to support those least responsible for, yet most affected by, the climate crisis.
As Washington retreats, all eyes turn to Bern, but the Swiss government's response has been marked by alarming lethargy. Despite agreeing to a new global finance goal at COP29 in Baku, the Federal Council has postponed any concrete decisions on increasing its contributions until 2027. Alliance Sud explicitly labels this delay as "irresponsible." By "kicking the can down the road," Switzerland is failing to signal the leadership required in this geopolitical vacuum. Berner argues that for a wealthy nation uniquely vulnerable to Alpine warming, this hesitation is politically and environmentally dangerous. Switzerland has the capacity to act now, yet it chooses to wait, leaving a gap between its diplomatic rhetoric and its financial reality.
The price of inaction is rising, and NGOs are putting a specific number on Switzerland's fair share: CHF 3 billion per year. Alliance Sud demands that the Swiss government triple its current climate finance commitments by 2035 to fill the void left by the US and meet its moral obligations. This figure is not arbitrary; it reflects the economic might of Switzerland and the escalating costs of global transition. The expectation set at COP29 was for developed countries to lead. With the US out of the equation, the pressure on Switzerland to step up is immense. Ministers are being urged to place climate change at the absolute top of every bilateral agenda, turning Swiss diplomacy into a proactive engine for global climate funding.
Despite the shockwaves from Washington, the global climate architecture remains surprisingly robust. "International cooperation will not collapse because the UNFCCC has 195 members rather than 196," asserts Dr. Joanna Depledge of Cambridge University. The Paris Agreement still covers a staggering 90% of global emissions, and market forces are proving resilient to political sabotage. Global investment in clean energy now surpasses $2 trillion annually, dwarfing fossil fuel spending. Swiss Climate Ambassador Félix Wertli notes that the transition away from fossil fuels is "in full swing" and developing faster than predicted. While the US exit is a setback, it has galvanized the EU and China to deepen their leadership, proving that the world is prepared to move forward—with or without the White House.