You're not nasty, just unable or unwilling to follow the discussion so I'll be nice and explain it one more time.
Alan keeps saying China emits more then the US and therefore needs to do more to reduce. I disagree because they have 4 times more people so per capita they're half of the US. So China emitting more is no reason for the US to get off the hook. That's the story as I see it on China.
Then he said Europe needs to do more because for one year there was a marginal increase (allthough the long term trend is down) while both China and the US had a marginal reduction.
I then responded Europe is still lower then the US (both per capita as well as total), so he has nothing to complain about Europe either. Also Europe is more then one country (surprise-surprise) so while some countries might have gone up there are still plenty (mostly North-West Europe) that keep going down.
But the fun thing about the graph he linked to is that it debunked the cry-babies here that China keeps increasing enormously while the data show they are reducing for 2-3 years already and are projected to reduce again next year.
But China does emit more CO2 as a country. The earth and warming doesn't care how many people they have. Per capita argument is a political and economic thing. Per capita has nothing to do with how much effect China as a country has on the environment. Individuals didn't sign the Paris Accord, countries did. Per capita was an excuse China used to not have to do anything. And the world including Obama believed them and bought their BS. Now you're trying to justify the error by arguing their per capita point. They're at 30%, (and India at 7% using the same argument for a total of 37% of the world's CO2). To leave them both out of the requirements until 2030 will not help the world reach its goals. Especially as they'll be going up as more and more Chinese and Indians start crapping in their homes instead of in the gutter and using light bulbs instead of candles.
But you go ahead and meet your goals. Compared to the Chinese and Indians, the cost of producing you goods will go up making your stuff less competitive to theirs. Your people's standard of living will go down as cost for electricity and other things go up. The Chinese and Indians will be smiling all the way to their banks. America? We'll compete with them on a more even playing field.