Beijing: The carbon-cheating Games
According to the Chinese Technology
Minister Wan Gang, the Beijing Olympic Games will result in the
release of some 1.18 million tonnes of carbon to the atmosphere,
“in part because so many athletes and spectators were traveling
long distances”. However, we need not worry about this, because
the Chinese authorities assure us that the Olympics will be “basically”
carbon neutral.
This is of course impossible. No-one
can be “carbon neutral” once the fuel needed for “traveling long
distances” (mostly by fossil fuel-powered
planes, buses and cars) has been used. The carbon stored in that
fuel will have been released, thus increasing the net amount of
carbon in the atmosphere, by adding the carbon that had until
then been stored in underground oil deposits. In the case of the
Beijing Olympics, this will result in an additional 1.18 million
tonnes of carbon that will contribute to increase global warming.
The problem is that many people honestly
believe in the possibility of becoming “carbon neutral”, mostly
because –as the saying goes- “a lie repeated often enough becomes
truth”. And this particular lie is being constantly repeated by
numerous “experts” with much to gain from carbon trading and even
by some supposedly “green” organizations.
Such is the case of the well-known WWF
(which has a panda bear as its logo), whose Chinese section has
created a special web page for facilitating payments for becoming
“carbon neutral”. The site explains that “Through its Go for Gold
global campaign, WWF is also calling Olympic athletes to commit
to a carbon neutral trip for the Beijing Games by donating the
equivalent of the carbon cost of their flight to a Gold Standard
climate-change offset project.” WWF-China even recommends five
specific “sales points”:
www.climatefriendly.com,
www.myclimate.org, www.atmosfair.de,
www.nativeenergy.com,
www.tricoronagreen.com
The above quote lends to believe that
by paying –“donating”- a certain amount of money, the carbon released
by the plane, bus or car will be made to disappear somewhere by
someone doing something that will “offset” those emissions. Paraphrasing
a well known film, this is in fact “Emission Impossible”.
However, people are made to believe
that a number of measures, that can be useful in themselves, but
that bear no relationship whatsoever with “neutralizing” fossil
fuel carbon emissions, can result in them achieving the “carbon
neutral” status. For instance, there is no doubt that energy saving
measures, energy efficiency, the use of solar, wind and geothermal
power, the reduction in the use of cars, are all positive steps
in the right direction. The problem arises –as in the case of
the Beijing Olympics- when the organizers claim that these measures
will ensure that the Games will be “basically” carbon neutral.
They will not.
What is necessary for truly addressing
the problem of climate change is to drastically reduce and eventually
eliminate the use of fossil fuels. This is not an issue of individual
choice about being “carbon neutral”, but a political issue that
needs to be dealt with at that level. In this case, the pressure
–and guilt- must not be put on the Olympic athletes –who will
have enough trouble in finding sufficient oxygen in the polluted
air of Beijing- but on the governments that continue to promote
a development model based on fossil fuels and environmental destruction.
The Beijing Olympics may have a successful
outcome from a sporting perspective, but they will not have the
“positive effect on climate change” claimed by Chinese minister
Wan and will certainly not be “basically” carbon neutral. Trying
to greenwash 1.18 million tonnes of carbon may prove to be a difficult
endeavour.