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The Rich Can Relax. We Just Need the Poor World to Cut Emissions. By 125%
British and G8 climate strategy just doesn't add up. As soon as serious curbs are needed it turns into impossible nonsense
Well, at least that clears up the mystery. Over the past year I've been fretting over an intractable contradiction. The government has promised spectacular cuts in greenhouse gas emissions. It is also pushing through new roads and runways, approving coal-burning power stations, bailing out car manufacturers and ditching regulations for low-carbon homes. How can these policies be reconciled?
We will find out tomorrow, when it publishes a series of papers on carbon reduction. According to one person who has read the drafts, the new policies will include buying up to 50% of the reduction from abroad. If this is true, it means that the UK will not cut its greenhouse gases by 80% by 2050, as the government promised. It means it will cut them by 40%. Offsetting half our emissions (which means paying other countries to cut them on our behalf) makes a mockery of the government's climate change programme.
The figure might have changed between the draft and final documents, but let's take it at face value for the moment, to see what happens when rich nations offload their obligations. What I am about to explain is the simple mathematical reason why any large-scale programme of offsets is unjust, contradictory and ultimately impossible.
Last week the G8 summit adopted the UK's two key targets: it proposed that developed countries should reduce their greenhouse gases by 80% by 2050 to prevent more than two degrees of global warming. This meant that it also adopted the UK's key contradiction, as there is no connection between these two aims. An 80% cut is very unlikely to prevent two degrees of warming; in fact it's not even the right measure, as I'll explain later on. But let's work out what happens if the other rich nations adopt both the UK's targets and its draft approach to carbon offsets.
Please bear with me on this: the point is an important one. There are some figures involved, but I'll use only the most basic arithmetic, which anyone with a calculator can reproduce.
The G8 didn't explain what it meant by "developed countries", but I'll assume it was referring to the nations listed in Annex 1 of the Kyoto protocol: those that have promised to limit their greenhouse gases by 2012. (If it meant the OECD nations, the results are very similar.) To keep this simple and consistent, I'll consider just the carbon emissions from burning fossil fuels, as listed by US Energy Information Administration. It doesn't publish figures for Monaco and Lichtenstein, but we can forgive that. The 38 remaining Annex 1 countries produce 15bn tonnes of CO2, or 51% of global emissions. Were they to do as the UK proposes, cutting this total by 80% and offsetting half of it, they would have to buy reductions equal to 20% of the world's total carbon production. This means that other countries would need to cut 42% of their emissions just to absorb our carbon offsets.
But the G8 has also adopted another of the UK's targets: a global cut of 50% by 2050. Fifty per cent of world production is 14.6bn tonnes. If the Annex 1 countries reduce their emissions by 80% (including offsets), they will trim global output by 12bn tonnes. The other countries must therefore find further cuts of 2.6bn tonnes. Added to the offsets they've sold, this means that their total obligation is 8.6bn tonnes, or 60% of their current emissions.
So here's the outcome. The rich nations, if they follow the UK's presumed lead, will cut their carbon pollution by 40%. The poorer nations will cut their carbon pollution by 60%.
If global justice means anything, the rich countries must make deeper cuts than the poor. We have the most to cut and can best afford to forgo opportunities for development. If nations like the UK cannot make deep reductions, no one can. We could, as I showed in my book Heat, reduce emissions by 90% without seriously damaging our quality of life. But this carries a political price. Business must be asked to write off sunk costs, people must be asked to make minor changes in the way they live. This country appears to be doing what it has done throughout colonial and postcolonial history: dumping its political problems overseas, rather than confronting them at home.
Befuddled yet? I haven't explained the half of it. As the G8 leaders know, a global cut of 50% offers only a faint to nonexistent chance of meeting their ultimate objective: preventing more than two degrees of warming. In its latest summary of climate science, published in 2007, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change suggested that a high chance of preventing more than two degrees of warming requires a global cut of 85% by 2050. In drafting the climate change act, the UK government promised to keep matching the target to the science. It has already raised its cut from 60% to 80% by 2050. If it sticks to its promise it will have to raise it again.
Global average CO2 emissions are 4.48 tonnes per person per year. Cutting the world total by 85% means reducing this to 0.67 tonnes. Average per capita output in the 38 Annex 1 countries is 10 tonnes; to hit this target they must cut their emissions by 93.3% by 2050. If the rich persist in offsetting 50% of this cut, the poorer countries would have to reduce their emissions by 7bn tonnes to absorb our offsets. To meet a global average of 0.67 tonnes, they would also need to chop their own output by a further 10.8bn tonnes. This means a total cut of 17.8bn tonnes, or 125% of their current emissions. I hope you have spotted the flaw.
In fact, even the IPCC's proposal has been superseded. Two recent papers in Nature show that the measure that counts is not the proportion of current emissions produced on a certain date, but the total amount of greenhouse gases we release. An 85% cut by 2050 could produce completely different outcomes. If most of the cut took place at the beginning of the period, our cumulative emissions would be quite low. If, as the US Waxman- Markey bill proposes, it takes place towards the end, they would be much higher. To deliver a high chance of preventing two degrees of warming, we would need to cut global emissions by something like 10% by the end of next year and 25% by 2012. This is a challenge no government is yet prepared to accept.
Carbon offsetting makes sense if you are seeking a global cut of 5% between now and for ever. It is the cheapest and quickest way of achieving an insignificant reduction. But as soon as you seek substantial cuts, it becomes an unfair, impossible nonsense, the equivalent of pulling yourself off the ground by your whiskers. Yes, let us help poorer nations to reduce deforestation and clean up pollution. But let us not pretend that it lets us off the hook.
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18 Comments so far
Show AllSometimes, these G8ers do nothing but complicate the issue of "global warming". So much complicated math and procrastinating to 2050 gives me a headache ! I say let's just have a totally green market to counter the polluters. Problem solved !
The G8 wants to be sure to give the financial markets ample opportunity to exploit climate change. Cap and trade will offer a great opportunity for new "products" like unregulated deriviatives that will assure the rich get richer, the poor get poorer, and the planet gets more polluted.
Exactly. it will be easy to buy up a 50% offset, since the carbon credits will be bundled-up and "securitized", then re-bundled and re-secuitized, then CDS'd.
I bet that a 0.005% cut in real GHG's could be easily leveraged up to a 50%, hell make it a 500% reduction... The next bubble brought to you by GoldmanSachs.
In this criminal run world wealth trumps health, simple as that. As individuals or in the collective the wealthy will not give up their advantage over the have nots.
Get a clue people.
Have a nice day you here.
I heard it said recently that, now the housing bubble has burst, the futures market in carbon offsets will be the next one.
Can anybody add some detail?
Goldman Sachs bets on carbon offsets.
http://www.fiercefinance.com/story/
goldman-sachs-bets-carbon-offsets/2008-11-12
Let me also add from Matt Taibbi, a must-read:
Inside The Great American Bubble Machine
How Goldman Sachs has engineered every major market manipulation since the Great Depression
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/28816321/
the_great_american_bubble_machine/print
Thanks for posting the link.
CS Monitor Carbon offsets bubble
http://features.csmonitor.com/environment/2009/07/10/could-cap-and-trade-create-another-economic-bubble/
Carbon offsets daily
http://www.carbonoffsetsdaily.com/global/the-rubber-duckies-deutsche-banks-countdown-to-the-carbon-bubble-9087.htm
re: Cutting Emissions
They have 'plans' for us all.
H1N1.
Do a little research, people.
That's all I'm saying.
Decide for yourself, who you want to trust.
Business as usual.
Or...
?
Cygnus and old goat, thanks for the links.
Somewhere, Phil and Wendy Gramm are smiling. Watch out for the first pol who suggests "investing" our Social Security funds in carbon futures.
Perhaps if we were to burn the poor into biochar we could achieve their 125% cut in emissions?
Just talking about the G8 as if they are in some legitimate position of world leadership disgusts me, what they are actually "deciding" is almost irrelevant.
Try out this headline:
"The corporate/plutocrat-appointed 'leaders' of the ex-Colonialist and ex-Imperial powers take a vacation at a 5-star resort together and talk about stuff over brunch."
Well, Whoop-e-di-doo!
The poor should definitely NOT be burned. They should be buried at the bottom of the ocean, covered with dirt/sand, and allowed to move slowly in that unoxygenated environment until subducted under the mantle. Can't allow their carbon to oxidize into CO2, don't ya know.
Hey - remember when 2012 sounded so far away?
And now, it's like, tomorrow...
Anyone wanna start their post catastrophic climate change training early, come on down to Dallas - we got heat indexes topping 110 degrees, sometimes 5-10 days in a row!!!
The American Dream is becoming a nightmare. Poor countries should take a good look at Bhutan's "Gross National Happiness" instead of emulating American consumerism:
"In a widely cited study, "A Global Projection of Subjective Well-being: A Challenge to Positive Psychology?" by Adrian G. White of the University of Leicester in 2007, Bhutan ranked 8th out of 178 countries in Subjective Well-Being, a metric that has been used by many psychologists since 1997.[2] In fact, it is the only country in the top 20 "happiest" countries that has a very low GDP."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gross_National_Happiness
"If global justice means anything, the rich countries must make deeper cuts than the poor."
That's a mighty big "IF" there, feller. Global justice is an oxymoron. It's sort of like that term we all know (humane behavior). If I were a june bug, I'd let you in on what I think humane behavior is.
Sorry for the misanthropic rant, folks. I'm just tired of the noise evil makes. It seems to be drowning out all other sounds these days.
That headline cracked me up.
YYYYYYYYYAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWNNNNNNNNNNNNNN ! I think I'll enjoy my pizza and some Scooby doo watching to go along. Global warming is just a silly hoax and cap-and-trade is silly too.
There is a silver bullet: A mass movement for free public transit.
http://freepublictransit.org