The
gaping chasm between climate science and climate negotiations
The
distance between climate science and climate negotiations was dramatically
illustrated at the UN climate meeting in Bonn earlier this month.
While scientists tell us we need large reductions in greenhouse
gas emissions, governments are setting targets for emission reductions
that are so low that runaway climate change is almost guaranteed.
At
a side event organised by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact
Research scientists gave a series of presentations under the title:
“Emissions in line with staying below 2°C – do current proposals
make it?”. Katje Frieler of the Potsdam Institute noted that more
than 100 countries call for a target of limiting global warming
to 2°C or lower. “How much emission reductions are necessary
in order to reach this target? ” she asked. The graphs she showed
were scary. Business as usual emissions would result in a temperature
increase of somewhere between 3°C and 8°C by 2100. But the
important figure was 1 trillion tons of CO2. That is the total amount
of emissions we can produce between 2000 and 2050 if the probability
of exceeding 2°C is to be limited to 25 per cent. The bad news
is that we have already emitted one-third of that in the last nine
years.
Joeri
Rogelj made things worse. He looked at the targets that countries
are currently setting for emissions reductions. He concluded that
if countries meet the targets that they have currently set, we are
“Virtually certain to exceed 2°C”, with median concentrations
of CO2 of over 700 parts per million by 2100.
Bill
Hare of the Potsdam Institute and Climate Analytics summed up the
implications of the findings, which were published in Nature magazine
on 30 April 2009. “Less than a quarter of the available and economically
recoverable, fossil fuel reserves can still be burned and emitted
from 2009 to 2050,” he said.
As
George Monbiot has pointed out, “The test of all governments’ commitment
to stopping climate breakdown is this: whether they are prepared
to impose a limit on the use of the reserves [of fossil fuels] already
discovered, and a permanent moratorium on prospecting for new reserves.
Otherwise it’s all hot air.”
The
urgency in the Potsdam Institute's presentations was not reflected
in the official negotiations in Bonn. None of the government delegations
present in Bonn were talking about imposing any limit on using fossil
fuels. The Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-Term Cooperative Action
under the Convention (AWGLCA) ended up with a 200-page draft negotiating
text, which is almost four times as long as the draft produced before
the meeting. The Ad Hoc Working Group on the Kyoto Protocol failed
to reach any agreement on emission reduction targets beyond 2012.
Hot air, in other words.
In
addition to stopping the burning and extraction of fossil fuels,
we also need to stop deforestation. But little progress was made
during the discussions about reducing emissions from deforestation
and forest degradation (REDD) in Bonn. In one informal plenary session
Michael Zammit Cutajar, the chair the AWGLCA, spoke at length about
curly brackets and square brackets. He talked about the “lack of
perfection in the curly brackets” and something he called “mind
brackets”.
At
an AWGLCA meeting on REDD during the second week of the talks, the
overwhelming impression was that someone had dreamed up REDD the
previous evening over a glass or two of Kölsch. For 90 minutes
delegates chatted about REDD as if no previous discussions on REDD
had ever happened. Other AWGLCA discussions were fiendishly complex,
featuring discussions of REDD plus; REDD and NAMAs; REDD and LULUCF;
REDD and MRV; REDD and CBD; REDD and UNDRIPs; REDD and carbon trading;
REDD and offsets; and REDD and carbon accounting. What all this
means is not the point, since there was little or no agreement on
any of this.
But
while the official negotiations on REDD are drowning in a soup of
acronyms, organisations such as The Nature Conservancy (TNC) are
steaming ahead with their own versions of REDD. At a side event
in Bonn, TNC's Sarene Marshall described the Berau REDD Pilot Programme
which covers an area of 2.2 million hectares in East Kalimantan.
Of this area, 780,000 hectares would be logged. This would be “reduced
impact logging / certification”, Marshall's presentation assured
us. The project would then “sell emissions reductions 'credits'
to voluntary carbon market buyers.”
There
are two serious problems here. First, the logging will produce large
amounts of emissions. Comparing these emissions with what might
have happened under more destructive logging is fraudulent. A new
Global Witness report, “Vested Interests – industrial logging and
carbon in tropical forests,” documents how reduced impact logging
“kills 5-10 non-target trees for every target tree cut, and releases
between 10 and 80 tonnes of carbon per hectare.” Logging also makes
forests more vulnerable to further deforestation and to fire. “During
the El Niño events in the late 1990s, 60% of logged forests
in Indonesian Borneo went up in smoke compared with 6% of primary
forest,” Global Witness notes.
The
second problem is that we need both to reduce emissions from burning
fossil fuel and to stop deforestation, especially industrial scale
logging of old-growth forests. We cannot offset one against the
other. “In practice offsetting is having a disastrous impact on
the prospects for averting catastrophic climate change,” writes
Friends of the Earth in a new report on offsets. “Offsetting must
not be expanded at Copenhagen. New proposed offsetting schemes must
be dropped from the negotiations, and existing offsetting mechanisms
need to be scrapped.”
The
most extraordinary slide in Sarene Marshall's presentation in Bonn
about the Berau project was titled “Berau REDD Phase I Structure”.
The slide outlines money transfers. An arrow with three dollar signs
goes from “Funders” to “Timber Concessions”. A trust fund and a
project management unit are to be established. Under the words “REDD
Activities” are three boxes, labelled: “Timber Concessions”, “Oil
Palm” and “Protection Forests”. Underneath is the word “offsets”.
One box includes the words “Local Government, National Government,
Civil society, etc.” and two others are for “Government” and “Communities”.
None of these seem to have any role in overseeing the money flows,
or anything much else. Marshall's slide shows the political and
financial infrastructure to be established by TNC, a US-based NGO,
which has not, at least as far as I'm aware, been elected to govern
this area of Kalimantan. This is not democracy. This is carbocracy.
By
Chris Lang, http://chrislang.org/
Global Witness, “Vested interests - Industrial logging and carbon
in tropical forests”. http://bit.ly/F7al4
Friends of the Earth, “Offsetting: A dangerous distraction”. http://bit.ly/3cgNy