As Donald Trump prepares to re-enter the Oval Office, he faces a geopolitical landscape fundamentally altered by China’s accelerated push for influence in trade, technology, and climate leadership. The shift is not subtle. Beijing has capitalised on four years of US policy uncertainty to deepen its economic ties across Asia and Africa, while advancing its military footprint in the South China Sea. The data is clear: China now accounts for 35% of global manufacturing output, and its Belt and Road Initiative has extended credit to over 140 nations. This is not a 'rise' but a repositioning of tectonic proportions.
For the climate scientist, the implications are stark. China remains the world’s largest emitter of carbon dioxide, but it also dominates the production of solar panels (80% of global supply) and batteries (70%). The US, under Trump’s first term, did not lean into this technological leverage. Instead, it withdrew from the Paris Agreement and gutted EPA oversight. Now, China is crafting international standards for green technology, funding lithium projects in Chile, and brokering climate deals with ASEAN states. The physics of this transition is simple: whoever controls the energy transition infrastructure controls the next century.
The new US administration faces a choice. It can double down on tariffs and a ‘America First’ stance, risking a decoupling that slows global decarbonisation. Or it can engage realistically with China’s new role, prioritising joint research on carbon capture and fusion energy. The latter may be the only path to keep temperature rises below 1.5 degrees Celsius. The world’s two largest emitters cannot afford to treat climate policy as a zero-sum game. The planet’s heat capacity is not a bargaining chip.
On the ground, the effects are already measurable. Arctic sea ice extent reached a record low this September. The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation is showing signs of slowing. These are not predictions; they are observations. The question is whether political leadership can catch up with the science. Trump’s second term will be defined by his response to this new reality. If he reverts to the playbook of deregulation and fossil fuel subsidies, the emissions gap will widen irreversibly. But if he builds on the Inflation Reduction Act’s momentum (even though he opposed it), there is a window to collaborate on grid modernisation and negative emissions technologies.
The news cycle will focus on trade wars and military posturing. But beneath that, the physical world is dictating terms. Oceans are warming at a rate equivalent to five Hiroshima bombs per second. That is not rhetoric; it is thermodynamics. The new global order is not just about power, but about survival.
For the British public, this means higher energy costs and more extreme weather events like the 40 degree Celsius heatwave of 2022. But it also means opportunity: the UK’s offshore wind capacity and nuclear expertise could be leveraged as a bridge between the US and China. The time for techno-optimism is now. The data will not wait for diplomacy.








