People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIII
No.
29 July 19, 2009 |
G8 Climate Declaration: Cart
Before The Horse
Raghu
THE
G8 Summit in L�Aquila, Italy, on July 8, 2009 was followed by a meeting
on July
9 with the G5 major emerging economies China, India, Brazil, Mexico and
South
Africa and then a meeting with African leaders the next day focusing on
Africa.
This so-called Heiligendamm process, named after the venue of the G8
Summit in
Germany in 2007, will apparently henceforth be called the
Heiligendamm-L�Aquila
process. Why it misses the Japanese venue of Toyako where the G8 Summit
was
held in 2008 along similar lines, or whether names of every subsequent
summit
venue will keep being added on will remain one of those mysteries of
international summitry. In any case, the global economic meltdown and
climate
change dominated the first two days, the G8 discussing these issues
first among
themselves and on the second day with the G5, underlining the
prevailing
international hierarchy.
This
was also the first annual G8 Summit since Barack Obama became US
president
after a campaign in which all presidential candidates promised to
reverse the
Bush-era US isolation on climate change and refusal to adopt a national
policy
of meaningful cuts in emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs). This shift
in the
national mood and in the balance of power within the US Congress, was
also
reflected in the recent passing of a US Climate Bill by a wafer thin
margin by
the House of Representatives putting forward, for the first time,
national
goals for GHG emissions reductions by the US which however fell far
short of
what would be required to stave off the looming climate crisis. There
is also
doubt whether the Bill will pass in the Senate and what form any joint
Bill
will take.
Against
this background, and with the 15th Conference of Parties (COP 15) to
the UN
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in Copenhagen in
December 2009
just around the corner, when a new post-2012 global agreement on
climate is to
be finalised, this Summit was expected to make substantial progress.
From the
complete stalemate of a few months ago at meetings at Poznan and Bonn,
some
forward movement can be said to have been made at L�Aquila due partly
to the
new US position bolstered by passage of the Climate Bill. However,
again surely
due to the US position on these issues, the L�Aquila Declaration
targets for
advanced countries still remain far below the requirement and
fundamental
issues of equity, funding and technology transfer are still to be
properly
addressed let alone resolved. To top it all, the main points of the
Declaration
were pious and rather vague intentions regarding outcomes, not the
robust
mechanisms and milestones by which to achieve them.
NOTIONAL
GOAL
Much
comment has been attracted by the statement in the Declaration of the
Major
Economies Forum on Energy and Climate, (i.e. G8 plus G5 countries) representing over 75 per cent of global GDP
and GHG emissions, that these countries �recognise the scientific view
that the
increase in global average temperature above pre-industrial levels
ought not to
exceed 2 degrees C.� True, this is the first time that advanced
industrialised
nations have collectively recognised that a temperature rise of 2
degrees C
constitutes an important and dangerous threshold. But there are two
major
problems with enunciating this as the goal.
First,
the Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has long been
warning
that, given present levels of accumulated GHGs in the atmosphere due to
failures in meeting Kyoto Protocol targets and given current and
potential trajectories
of GHG emissions by major economies, 2 degrees C rise in temperatures
with
grave consequences are almost inevitable in the medium term, i.e. in
two to
three decades, unless drastic measures are taken in the short to medium
terms.
Second, while setting a goal of a maximum 2 degrees C rise may be
laudable,
this is merely an aspirational target, and will remain just a statement
of good
intentions unless it is spelled out how this objective is proposed to
be
achieved in terms of short and medium-term emission reduction measures.
Minus
the latter, this is a classic case of putting the cart before the horse
without
which the destination cannot be reached. As the old saying goes, the
road to
damnation is paved with good intentions!
On
emission reduction targets, the MEF Declaration is curiously silent,
even
though the G8 industrialised countries meeting the day before set
themselves
some targets. But the G8 plus G5 together only state that they will
�work
between now and Copenhagen� to identify a global goal for substantially
reducing global emissions by 2050.� The fact that this Declaration
contains no
emissions reduction targets is a pointer to the gulf that still
separates the
developed and the developing nations. The latter were clearly not too
impressed
with the goals set by the G8 the previous day, and the G8 in turn were
pushing
the G5 to make their own emission reductions commitments. And yet, some
new
formulations in both the G8 and MEF Declarations should be noted for
their
positive as well as negative connotations.
G8 STILL
HOLDING BACK
The
G8 Declaration at L�Aquila called for reducing global emissions by 50
per cent
by 2050 and, towards this end, also announced a �goal of developed
countries
reducing emissions of greenhouse gases in aggregate by 80 per cent or
more by
2050 compared to 1990 or more recent
years (emphasis added).�
IPCC�s
4th Assessment Report released in 2007 had called for stabilising
atmospheric
GHG concentrations at around 450 ppmv (parts per million by volume) and
had stated
that this would require global GHG emissions to start declining by 2015
and be
less than 50 per cent of today�s levels by 2050, which would in turn
require
developed country emissions to reduce by 40 per cent below 1990 levels
by 2020
and by 95 per cent below 1990 levels by 2050.
While the G8 target for global emissions in
2050
broadly corresponds to IPCC recommendations (qualifying clauses being
discussed
later), all other targets are far lower, with considerable significance
for
outcomes. The G8 targets, both global and for developed countries, are
long-term ones, that is for 2050, with no medium-term targets for 2020
or 2030.
It is well known that if medium-term targets such as IPCC�s above are
not
achieved, GHG concentrations and temperature rise would have gone
beyond the
reach of the longer-term goals for 2050. In other words, the long-term
goals
mean little unless the medium term targets are achieved. The EU has
been
pushing hard for stringent emissions cuts by 2020, but again bowed
before US pressure
at the G8. Why the US should have resisted shorter-term targets per
se is
unclear since the recently passed US Climate Bill too commits the US to
interim
targets. One possible explanation is that the US is still not ready to
commit
itself to a global Treaty and for its performance to be judged in an
international forum.
The
G8 obfuscation on the baseline year for these proposed emissions
reductions has
now become standard practice of the US and of all groupings in which
the US is
involved such as the G8, regardless of the stand of the EU or
individual
European countries like UK, Germany or France which favour strong
interim
targets against a 1990 baseline. All IPCC recommendations too are for
reductions below 1990 levels, which is the baseline set under the Kyoto
Protocol. How much difference this can make can be understood from the
fact
that the US Climate Bill�s targets of 17 per cent reduction by 2020, 42
per
cent by 2030 and 83 per cent by 2050, all relative to 2005, are
equivalent to
only 3 per cent, 33 per cent and 75 per cent reduction by 2020, 2030
and 2050
respectively below 1990 levels. (Incidentally, all these targets as
passed by
the House are for more reductions than proposed by president Obama at
15, 40
and 80 per cent respectively!) All this makes the desired outcome of
restricting temperature rise to 2 degrees C that much less possible.
How
toothless the G8 targets are was made abundantly clear by Canada
immediately
after the Summit. Canada, with one of the worst emissions records among
developed countries, which has an already low target of reducing
emissions
60-70 per cent below 2006 levels by 2050, pooh-poohed the G8 targets as
merely
�aspirational� and said that Canada saw no need to change its policy
accordingly.
DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
The
MEF Declaration issued jointly by the G8 and G5 countries allows the G8
obfuscation on medium-term targets and baseline years, notwithstanding
the
several additional clauses that are supposed to indicate the different
thinking
of the G5 and, by inference, other developing nations. Thus, while
endorsing
the aspirational goal of limiting temperature rise to 2 degrees C and
the
mismatched long-term goal of the developed countries to reduce
emissions by
2050, the MEF Declaration makes no mention of the important medium-term
targets
but only vaguely speaks of developed countries undertaking �robust
aggregate
and individual reductions in the midterm�. The statement that the MEF
countries
would �work together before Copenhagen to achieve a strong result in
this
regard� inspires little confidence given the enormous leeway already
conceded
to the developed countries and the unwillingness to push them hard on
the major
issues.
Notably
missing in the Declaration are any references to the responsibility of
developed countries for historical emissions and therefore the
necessity of
these countries, following the �polluter pays� principle, making
compensatory
financial contributions enabling developing countries to adapt to
climate
changes and to adopt actions for mitigating GHG emissions. Rather, the
Declaration speaks in delightfully vague terms about such financial
assistance
and simply endorses a proposal by Mexico to set up a �Green Fund�
without
making clear the source of these funds. In fact, the Declaration merely
says
that �financing to address climate change will derive from multiple
sources,
including both public and private funds and carbon markets�, again
avoiding the
issue of the primary responsibility of developed countries in this
regard.
Two
formulations in the MEF Declaration are worthy of note.
For
the first time, the G5 has accepted that they �will promptly undertake
actions
whose projected effects on emissions represent a meaningful deviation
from
business as usual in the midterm� and that �the peaking of global and
national
emissions should take place as soon as possible�, implying that a
capping of
emissions from leading developing countries is now on the cards.
Regular
readers will recall that these columns have been among the very few
progressive
and developing country voices, especially in India, that have advocated
this
position. However, we have argued that such a G5 position should be put
forward
conditional upon the developed
countries committing themselves to deep emissions cuts along the lines
recommended by the IPCC as well as to financial assistance and
technology
transfer to developing countries. Given the absence of these latter in
the
L�Aquila G8 and MEF Declarations, the agreement of the G5 to slowing
down rate
of increase, then peaking and finally reduction of emissions may be
seen as
somewhat of a give-away.
A
potentially significant new direction contained in the MEF Declaration,
if
sincerely meant, implemented and followed up, is that the G8 and G5
countries
would �dramatically increase and coordinate public
sector investments in research, development, and demonstration of
these
[transformational low-carbon, climate-friendly technologies
technologies] with
a view to doubling such investments by 2015.� Emphasis till now,
especially
from the G8, has been on private sector R&D as well as on measures
to
protect the intellectual property rights (IPR) in this regard, which
have been
widely seen as working against the development and equitable spread of
technologies leading to a low-carbon developmental trajectory. In fact,
even
the L�Aquila G8 Declaration speaks of
the �critical role of an efficient system of intellectual
property
rights (IPR) to foster innovation� and the development and diffusion of
new
technologies �particularly through the engagement and leveraging of
critical
private sector investment.� Who is bluffing, one wonders?
With
all this waffling, the usual posturing by the developed countries and
the
yielding of ground by the EU on the one hand and by the G5 on the
other, it is
perhaps difficult to see where the global climate parleys will lead
before, at
and after Copenhagen. But reading the tea-leaves, some movement however
small
seems discernible from the total standstill of a year or two ago. Can
serious
negotiations begin now?