An Ambassador’s Insights about China-U.S. Relations

Bilateral efforts between the United States and China to address climate change have come to a virtual standstill asU.S.-China relations have taken a turn for the worse in recent months, with a trade war emerging, precipitated by U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff initiatives.  That is part of the assessment offered by Nicholas Burns, the Roy and Barbara Goodman Family Professor of the Practice of Diplomacy and International Relations at Harvard Kennedy School and former U.S. Ambassador to China – in the latest episode of my monthly podcast,  “Environmental Insights: Discussions on Policy and Practice from the Harvard Environmental Economics Program.” The podcast is produced by the Harvard Environmental Economics Program.  I hope you will listen to our conversation here.

Nick Burns, whose esteemed career in the civil service has spanned more than 30 years, explains that the Biden administration had two major priorities for U.S.-China relations while he served as U.S. Ambassador from 2022 to 2025.  

“Competition for us was the main focus of our efforts with China, but we also knew…that we have to live in peace with China. The idea of a war would be catastrophic for both countries and the world, and there are some issues where our interests are aligned and we need to work together for the benefit of both of our countries and the world.  I thought that signature issue was climate change, and that China and the United States could…work together both in the Paris Agreement process and also bilaterally,” he remarks.

“I am someone who deeply believes in the Paris Agreement, that we need to remain committed to working with China and the other 193 or 194 nation states as part of the Conference of the Parties, and that this is an existential issue for the future of our planet, for the eight billion people who live on it.”

Nick notes that while the bilateral relationship may be primarily competitive, there are occasions when the two countries can work together as was the case when the United States and China negotiated and signed the Sunnyland Statement in 2023, affirming the two nations’ joint commitment to take actions to address climate change.

“[Former U.S. lead climate negotiator] John Kerry and [China’s former special climate envoy] Xie Zhenhua spent a lot of time together… to achieve that statement where… they held up climate change as an issue where it was definitely in the interest of both countries and that both of us had to play a leadership role,” he explains.

Nick Burns also describes in our podcast conversation his frustration with the Trump administration’s decision to withdraw the U.S. from the Paris Agreement, in effect removing the United States from international climate negotiations.

“I’m gravely disappointed to see the backsliding by the Trump administration on this issue. I guess we shouldn’t be surprised given what President Trump did in his first term, and he threatened to pull us out this time, which he’s now done, but that is not in our interest. In fact, it’s really harmed our ability to protect our own country from the ravages of climate change, and it’s harmed our global credibility as a leader in the world,” he remarks. “It’s going to rebound not just on this issue, but I think in others as well.”

Burns emphasizes the importance of maintaining substantive communications with China even when the two countries disagree on some major issues “because I think it’s fair to say this is our most important diplomatic relationship in the world. What happens in this relationship is going to drive a lot of history, our global history, in the next decade, two or three.”

Finally, Nick Burns urges that students from the Harvard Kennedy School and elsewhere should consider a career in the civil service, even if they are currently disenchanted with the present political environment in Washington.

“We need good men and women to go into public service in our country, to serve in the military, in the federal government, and especially in the State Department as we engage countries around the world. And I think that the pendulum will swing back towards an appreciation for nonpartisan public servants,” he says. “We’ve got to show the rest of the world and our own countrymen and women that we’re as committed as they are to taking on the challenge of climate and to meeting it the only way that’s going to be effective working with other countries, including China. So, if you’re a young person listening, trying to figure out what you want to do with your life, there’s so much good you can do.”

For this and much more, please listen to my complete podcast conversation with Nick Burns, the 67th episode over the past five years of the Environmental Insights series, with future episodes scheduled to drop each month.  You can find a transcript of our conversation at the website of the Harvard Environmental Economics Program.  Previous episodes have featured conversations with:

“Environmental Insights” is hosted on SoundCloud, and is also available on iTunesPocket CastsSpotify, and Stitcher.

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