Kevin
Hester has been chronicling stories all week spouting nonsense about
the “2C target”. I have been assiduously avoiding them -until
now.
Paris
Talks Won’t Achieve 2°C Goal: Does That Matter?
Officials
involved with United Nations climate talks have been warning that the
next pact, which will be negotiated in December in Paris, won’t
alone hold global warming to less than 2°C, or 3.6°F.
MSN,
10
February, 2015
Those
warnings have triggered renewed concern for the future of the planet
as negotiators meet this week in Geneva, Switzerland, for a round of
lower-profile talks. Slate described the cautionary words — made
separately by EU climate negotiator Miguel Arias Canete and U.N.
Framework Convention on Climate Change executive secretary Christiana
Figueres — as “heartbreaking.” The Guardian characterized the
statements as a downgrading of expectations. Figueres’s renewed
warnings prompted Grist to ponder whether there’s “any point”
to the negotiations process.
Dismay
is understandable. When negotiators agreed in Copenhagen in 2009 to
“reduce global emissions so as to hold the increase in global
temperature below 2°C,” it was because an Earth hotter than that
was considered unacceptably dangerous. (The planet’s surface has
warmed about 0.85°C (1.5°F) since 1880, worsening floods, storms
and deadly heat waves.) The 2°C target has since become a keystone
goal of the negotiations.
The
recent warnings did not, however, surprise climate negotiations
experts. Nor were their fears for the planet worsened.
That's
because the Paris meetings is being viewed as an opportunity to
launch a wholly new approach to global climate action — an approach
that could eventually do far more to constrain temperature rise than
the Paris agreement alone.
“More
and more of the participants in the process recognize that maybe the
2 degree goal is not something that’s going to be achieved out of
the Paris agreement,” Alex Hanafi, an Environmental Defense Fund
climate strategist, who is in Geneva for the meetings, said.
“The
idea is that the Paris agreement will put us not on an emissions
trajectory for 2 degrees, but on an institutional trajectory that
allows us to try to meet that goal,” Hanafi said.
A
New Beast
The
climate negotiations juggernaut is being hauled off its old rails,
which many concluded were guiding the planet down a long and dark
tunnel toward unmitigated climate change. Getting it moving along a
new course will take some time.
"It
is a fundamental misinterpretation or misunderstanding of the
complexity of what we're dealing with to even imagine that an
agreement in Paris would in and of itself, at the turn of a dime,
miraculously solve climate change," Figueres told reporters last
week. "What Paris does is to chart the course toward that
long-term destination.”
Two
decades have been spent trying, and failing, to force developed
countries to slash greenhouse gas pollution levels by particular
amounts within specified timeframes under international law. The
Paris agreement will take a new approach — one that bears little
resemblance to the Kyoto Protocol of 1997, which attempted to force
developed countries to meet homogenous climate targets. (The U.S.
never ratified the protocol, Europe met its targets largely because
of an economic downturn, and Canada withdrew after it became clear
that it would fail to comply). The next agreement will rely instead
on peer pressure, national accountability, and global cooperation to
voluntarily try to slow the climate-changing impacts of all nations,
be they developed, dirt poor or somewhere in between.
Pollution
levels are rising faster now than at any time in history, despite
recent improvements in the Western world. Countries like the U.S.
that got rich burning fossil fuels — pumping out so much of the
climate-changing pollution that’s now in the atmosphere — are
being pressured to help bankroll the climate change battles of poorer
countries.
The
hope is that the Paris agreement will build a process that will be
strengthened over time. As years and annual climate agreements tick
past, the already falling costs of renewable energy are expected to
continue to tumble. Meanwhile, climate change’s dangerous impacts
will grow clearer. If all goes according to the latest, somewhat
vaguely sketched climate negotiations master plan, governments would
agree during future negotiations to further deepen their cuts to
fossil fuel use, replaced with cleaner alternatives. In doing so, the
plan goes, countries would collectively avoid blowing the overarching
goal of keeping warming to less than 2°C.
Robert
Stavins, an environmental economist who directs the Harvard Project
on Climate Agreements, says keeping to less than 2°C of warming
becomes “less feasible each year.” But the most important thing
“for ultimate success” on long-term climate action right now, he
says, is building a “sound foundation” — something he thinks
the Paris agreement may provide.
“Some
advocates will characterize the Paris agreement as a failure if it
does not lead to an immediate decrease in emissions, and does not
prevent atmospheric temperatures from rising by more than 2 degrees
Celsius,” Stavins said.
“These
well-intentioned advocates mistakenly focus on the short-term change
in emissions among participating countries,” he said, pointing, for
example, to the 5.2 percent cuts to pollution required over 10 years
from some developed countries under the Kyoto Protocol. “It’s the
long-term change in global emissions that matters.”
Paris
Possibilities
It’s
not yet known what the world’s governments will commit to do to
protect the climate in Paris. Those details will be announced
throughout the year. But the basic details of the commitments planned
by three of the world’s four biggest polluters have already been
announced. The U.S. says it will curb its greenhouse gas pollution
level by 26 to 28 percent by 2025 compared with 2005 levels. China
says its pollution level will plateau by 2030. And EU politicians
have already resolved to reduce greenhouse gas pollution by 40
percent between 1990 and 2030.
A
team of 16 European and American researchers analyzed how the climate
would be affected if the U.S., EU and China meet these commitments,
and if other countries follow through on various pledges made during
earlier rounds of meetings. The research was “based on some
extrapolation” from previous climate pledges, Massimo Tavoni, the
Politecnico di Milano and Stanford University researcher who led the
study, which was published in Nature Climate Change in December,
said. “So there’s a lot of uncertainty.”
Under
a business-as-usual scenario, Tavoni and his colleagues concluded
that the world would eventually heat up by 4°C to 5°C, or 7°F to
9°F, compared with pre-industrial times. But if the countries all
meet their climate pledges then, with all other things being equal,
the Paris agreement would cap global warming at 3°C or 3.5°C.
Other
Possibilities
Alden
Meyer, policy director at the Union of Concerned Scientists who is in
Geneva for this weeks’ talks, said it’s “clearly true” that
the Paris agreement won’t get the planet on track for a future in
which temperatures remain less than 2°C hotter than they were in
centuries past. But that doesn’t mean he’s given up hope on that
goal.
“What
we have to come out of Paris with is a sense that the Paris agreement
has not foreclosed the possibility of getting on the 2 degree track,”
Meyer said.
One
of the ways the Paris agreement could help keep warming to less than
2°C, Meyer said, would be by sending a clear message to the energy
industry and investment community that governments are committed to
protecting the climate. That could signal a faster wholesale switch
to cleaner energy alternatives, fostering investments in clean energy
and reducing the viability of oil and gas drilling and coal mining.
“If
you get a combination of commitments from all the major players in
the Paris agreement, plus a fairly ambitious process to have them
come out and take more bites at the apple, and not wait 10 or 15
years to do the next round of negotiations, then there’s a fighting
chance,” Meyer said. “There’s no doubt it’s tough.”
You know things are bad when a conservative paper like the Herald print stories about "planet hacking"
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