Archive for the ‘UNFCCC’ category

Is the future of climate change policy global or local? Yes.

May 4th, 2010

by Avrel Seale

It’s tempting to say that progress on carbon regulation is “glacial,” but considering how fast many glaciers are melting, that cliché doesn’t even work any more.

Last December’s U.N. climate change conference in Copenhagen might have been doomed early by the hype. But whatever the reason, the underwhelming results have many of those who care about the issue wondering if these huge annual meetings with their draft declarations and street-theater protests are really the way to a solution.

Recently, panelists at the “Climate Change Law and Policy after Copenhagen” colloquium at The University of Texas made the cases for and against the continued emphasis on a United Nations approach.

David Hunter of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (the event’s cosponsor) argued that, though the Copenhagen Accord was but 12 paragraphs (long, dense paragraphs, it should be noted), and although it remains nonbinding or, in the oxymoron of the day, “soft law,” it was still measurable, reportable, and therefore valuable. Hunter especially called out progress on REDD and said that line of negotiation should be resurrected in Cancún.

But even Hunter, a fan of the U.N. framework, admits that Copenhagen at times felt like little more than “dueling press releases.” “The U.N. process took it on the chin a little,” he said.

Josh Busby of The University of Texas’ LBJ School of Public Affairs wasn’t as charitable. He called Copenhagen “a moment that freed us” from the U.N. framework. Busby said that he would be happy to see “the spectacle” of a 40,000-participant meeting “wither on the vine,” and made the case for smaller meetings with more flexible instruments. This is already happening, he noted, with meetings such as the G20 and the Major Economies Forum putting carbon on their agendas. Green Detectives Valerie Davis and Kevin Tuerff attest that there were nowhere near 40,000 participants in Bali or Poznan, and they don’t expect to see those numbers in Cancún either.

Hunter pushed back, saying that if we lost UNFCCC, and moved to negotiations with only the biggest actors at the table, “we’ll lose the moral authority of the island nations,” i.e. the small countries that will be first to succumb to the effects of climate change when a rising ocean swallows them up. (In related news, an island in the Bay of Bengal that had been disputed territory for years by India and Bangladesh is now completely underwater. Ten other islands in the area are on the verge, and officials estimate that if sea levels rise one meter by 2050, as projected by some climate models, 18 percent of Bangladesh’s coastal area will be submerged, displacing 20 million people.)

While David Hunter argues that the U.N. conferences create momentum for top-down change, he admits that the complexity of the issue is dumbfounding. The whole UNFCCC idea was modeled on the Montreal Protocol, the 1987 international treaty to protect the ozone layer. It successfully phased out CFCs. But replicating that success with something as basic as carbon dioxide, which affects every economy and therefore every person on earth, is different than dealing with a compound in aerosol sprays. Some have concluded it’s just too complicated for a Montreal-style process.

While the international process might seem like it’s all-or-nothing, there’s plenty that can be done and is being done at the national and sub-national levels, efforts like the European cap-and-trade system, the Western Climate Initiative in the American West, individual state efforts, and programs to reduce our carbon footprint city by city and house by house. It all, irrefutably, adds up.

The carbon-regulation debate on Capitol Hill seems to be a contest of who has the lowest expectations. It’s a soap opera that changes by the hour, with this issue, like most others, regularly held hostage by utterly unrelated issues. In the latest episode, a hopeful collaboration between senators Graham, Kerry, and Lieberman began to unravel last week when Graham, the lone Republican, withdrew his support, purportedly over pending congressional action on immigration, another issue on which he is likely to be a party outlier.

In the absence of congressional action, there is still the executive branch, and on April 1, the EPA and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) announced a new national program that will reduce greenhouse gas emissions and improve fuel economy for new cars and trucks sold in the United States from 2012 through 2016. EPA finalized the first-ever national greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions standards under the Clean Air Act, and NHTSA finalized Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards under the Energy Policy and Conservation Act.

The urgency of the situation forces us to think beyond geography and, of course, beyond regulation, too. Lee Scott, longtime CEO and now chairman of Wal-Mart, has been credited with sparking a cultural revolution at the retail juggernaut that resulted most recently in a voluntary commitment to slash 20 million metric tons of carbon emissions from its global supply chain by the end of 2015. When you’re talking about Wal-Mart, which is a de facto national economy unto itself, that voluntary goal surely has a greater impact than the regulatory triumphs of many smaller nations combined.

So should climate change be addressed from the top down, as with the U.N., or from the bottom up? The answer is, if climate change is as dire as scientists say, we’d be both crazy and criminally negligent not to attack it from both directions. We don’t have time for either/or arguments. Climate change action must be both/and. And we’ll need a little luck, even at that.

Jack and Jill, or Chicken Little?

April 14th, 2010

An energy industry gets called out for greenwashing, a food company gets zapped for misleading fat-content claims on its packaging, but a government agency investigated for hyping environmental problems?

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That’s what’s been swirling in the U.K. since the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) launched its nursery-rhyme-themed campaign last October, featuring, of all people, Jack and Jill and the Three Men in a Tub.

Reports by the Guardian say the $9.2 million campaign, by ad agency AMV BBDO, generated nearly 1,000 complaints to the U.K.’s Advertising Standards Authority (ASA), claiming everything from “scaremongering” to inaccurate climate change science to propaganda. In March, the ASA ruled that some of the language in the DECC’s print ads featuring ominous weather patterns “should have been phrased more tentatively,” but that the images of flood and drought were not exaggerated. That far from killed the “Act on C02” campaign — including this broadcast PSA, and the DECC is not rolling over.

This brings to mind two of EnviroMedia’s five Greenwashing Index criteria, set by University of Oregon advertising faculty, asking consumers to scrutinize words and images in ads before buying into green claims from big business. In the U.K., these same criteria are used by a media watchdog organization to scrutinize a government public service campaign for blowing environmental issues out of proportion.

Who is the ASA, and why doesn’t the United States have a similar organization? The ASA is “the U.K.’s independent regulator of advertising across all media, including TV, internet, sales promotions and direct marketing.” It’s funded by fees levied on advertisers by advertisers, meaning the U.K.’s ad industry is regulating itself. Here in the United States, advertising is regulated by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). The same FTC that has spent the past two years deliberating whether to update (not enforce, just update) its 18-year-old “Green Guides,” which haven’t been updated for 12 years now. The same Green Guides whose update, said the American Advertising Federation (AAF), the American Association of Advertising Agencies, and the Association of National Advertisers, “would have  a chilling effect on an advertiser’s ability to communicate important and valuable information to consumers.” C’mon now. EnviroMedia has been paying dues to our local AAF affiliate for more than a decade now. We can do better. We’re talking about an update of Green Guides no one even enforces.

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Back to the Act on CO2 campaign. In my opinion, Jack and Jill, and you Three Men in a Tub, you might have a little “Chicken Little” going on. Extreme wet, dry, cold and hot are characteristics of climate change, which scientists say is caused by excessive CO2 emissions. Is the sky falling? No. Is the Earth’s overall temperature rising? Are glaciers melting? Yes, say the scientists. But if EnviroMedia were to be fortunate enough to help with a government-funded public service campaign to get as many citizens as possible to emit less C02, we probably wouldn’t start with ads featuring lovable children’s characters in danger of dying from thirst or drowning. The only thing obvious about climate change is that it’s controversial, so why fuel the fire by starting with a campaign featuring extreme consequences?

Just about anyone will agree wasting a limited natural resource is not a good thing – whether it’s water, coal, or oil. Our research has shown that the more people know about the natural source of their drinking water or the fuel that makes their lights go on, the more willing they are to be more efficient, or conserve.  And we’ve seen measurable results in water conservation and renewable energy campaigns that directly connect the water tap or light switch to the consumption of limited natural resources. Couple that knowledge of natural resources with some simple – not extreme – tips for efficiency, and you can see better community buy-in and results – despite the political beliefs of your target audiences or related controversies.

Nursery-rhymes aside, bravo to the UK’s DECC for its overall Act on C02 program, and for reinforcing the IPCCs conclusions that climate change is connected to human activity. At least they’ve captured the attention of U.K. consumers and the world. Its campaign reminds me of this Environmental Defense Fund PSA I saw a couple of years ago. It follows a similar (scare) tactic, but seems more compelling and urgent than Jack and Jill — and is not coming from the government. (And yes, it was produced with the help of the Ad Council, a wonderful organization established long ago by the American advertising industry.)

I also applaud the ASA and U.K.’s advertising industry for its self-regulation, especially in the areas of environmental and health claims. Now, don’t ask me about these other ASA crack-downs on advertising condoms during the breakfast hour, or frightening children with scary ad spoofs of The Shining.

UN Climate Chief Resigns; Costa Rican Woman May Help Negotiations

February 19th, 2010

May 17,  2010 UPDATE:

New UNFCCC Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres

New UNFCCC Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres

UN Secretary General Ban ki-Moon has appointed a Latin American woman to lead the global fight against climate change. Christiana Figueres has been a member of the Costa Rican negotiating team since 1995. She represented Latin America and the Caribbean on the Executive Board of the Clean Development Mechanism in 2007, and was then elected Vice President of the Conference of the Parties 2008-2009.
She has served as Director of International Cooperation in the Ministry of Planning in Costa Rica, and as Chief of Staff to the Minister of Agriculture. She was also the Director of Renewable Energy in the Americas (REIA) and is founder of the Center for Sustainable Development of the Americas (CSDA).

When things get really chaotic in public companies, often the only solution is for the CEO to go. Yvo de Boer, executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), announced he will resign from his position, effective July 1. The resignation won’t be an immediate “game-changer,” but a fresh face with better relationships with developing countries should help international climate negotiations. A chasm between rich and poor countries prohibited the development of a global climate treaty in Copenhagen.

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According to a UNFCCC news release, Mr. de Boer said, “It was a difficult decision to make, but I believe the time is ripe for me to take on a new challenge, working on climate and sustainability with the private sector and academia.”

We heard Mr. de Boer speak in person several times, most recently at Copenhagen Business Day.  The event was organized by the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD) and International Chamber of Commerce, held in conjunction with COP 15. He seemed exhausted and frustrated from repeatedly giving advice to leaders for the best path forward, with little to show for it. It’s ironic Mr. de Boer took business leaders to task that day, complaining that they communicate climate issues with government policy makers better on a national level than globally. Mr. de Boer has accepted a gig with with KPMG as global adviser on climate and sustainability, so we’ll see if he leads by example in global business communications. Dealing with the cards he was dealt by global political leaders, I give him high marks for his five years of leadership at the United Nations.

Mr. de Boer intends to help negotiations move forward ahead of the Climate Change Conference in Mexico in November. After the lackluster results of the Copenhagen Accord, some politicians lost hope the United Nations was the right vehicle for achieving a global agreement to reduce greenhouse gases. Perhaps de Boer’s resignation will allow the UNFCCC one more chance.

We send our congratulations and prayers for success to Excecutive Secretary Figueres.

Copenhagen Accord Barely Alive As Deadline Passes

January 31st, 2010
Valerie Davis and Kevin Tuerff attended COP 15 as delegates.

Valerie Davis and Kevin Tuerff attended COP 15 as delegates.

U.N. deadline passes with mixed results; Mexico prepares to try again for global climate treaty

Fifty-five of the 193 countries that participated in the U.N. climate summit in Copenhagen have submitted their emission-reduction plans by the January 31 deadline. Without India and China submitting plans, the Copenhagen Accord is on “life support” as a tool for reducing global greenhouse gases. However, the United States and most of the biggest polluting nations submitted their commitments to the United Nations.

“It’s a soft deadline,” explained Yvo de Boer, executive secretary of the United Nations Framework on Climate Change. “If countries follow up the outcomes of Copenhagen calmly, with eyes firmly on the advantage of collective action, they have every chance of completing the job,” he said.

President Barack Obama worked with other world leaders to negotiate the outcome of COP 15 in Copenhagen last month. We participated in the event as business delegates, and blogged at http://www.GreenDetectives.net.

Feb 4 UPDATE: Todd Stern, the US Special Envoy for Climate Change, issued a statement about the results: “We are pleased to be among 55 countries – including all of the world’s major economies — that have submitted pledges to limit or reduce their greenhouse gas emissions under the Copenhagen Accord. These countries represent nearly 80% of global emissions. In supporting the Accord, we are taking an important step in the global effort to combat climate change.”

“In addition to the countries that have submitted targets or actions, a number of others have conveyed their support for the Accord. We urge all countries to join this broad coalition by promptly conveying their support for the Accord to the UNFCCC Secretariat.”

MARCH 9 UPDATE: China and India asked the UN to officially be listed as part of the accord.

“The Copenhagen Accord includes important advances on funding, technology, forestry, adaptation and transparency. The United States is committed to working with our partners around the world to make the Accord operational and to continue the effort to build a strong, science-based, global regime to combat the profound threat of climate change.” (From US State Department)

This could be interpreted to mean: sign up for the accord, or no financial aid from the U.S.

Behind the U.N. and U.S. spin of the final outcome for the accord is a valley of discontent between developed and developing countries. Some believe the differences are so great that the largest countries should try to fix the climate problem on their own. Others want to give UNFCCC negotiations a chance, with up to five more negotiating sessions this year, concluding in late November at COP 16 in Cancún, Mexico.

Copenhagen Accord Greenhouse Gas Reduction Goals by 2020
According to news reports, these large countries reported these emission-reduction commitments from 2005 levels. Check here or come back to GreenDetectives.net for updates.

Country     % Reduction  % of Global Pollution
Australia                        5                      1.3
Brazil                            20                     6.6
Canada                         17                      2
European Union            20**                 15
Indonesia                     26                     4.7
Japan                            25**                 4
United States              17                     18
** by 1990 levels

China, the world’s largest emitter (generating 22 percent of global emissions), said publicly it would reduce its carbon intensity by at least 40 percent (a different measure) while allowing overall emissions to increase. India (6 percent) pledged a 20-25 percent reduction of 2005 emissions.

U.S. negotiators in Copenhagen were trying to encourage countries to sign the accord, dangling a $10 billion carrot of financial aid from the United States and others. The money would be used for climate adaptation and mitigation.

“The proof of their commitment, their credentials will be demonstrated if the $10 billion flows as promised,” said, Jairam Ramesh, India’s Environment Minister. “If it doesn’t, we would believe that developed countries aren’t serious about climate change.”

Picture 3Mexico willing to lead

COP 16 moved to Cancún

Mexican president Felipe Calderón sees a problem with the dispute between poor countries and rich countries. Calling it a false dilemma, he says, “It’s as if we were in an airplane that has serious problems, and there is a terrible dispute between the passengers of first class and tourist class.”

At the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, last week, Calderón said, “My perception is lack of consensus is related to economic problems in each nation. There are huge economic costs associated with the tasks to cope with climate change.”

Noting the climate financing proposals from developed countries are probably not enough, he urges good-faith negotiations to move forward. He appears ready to try to be the bridge builder between rich and poor. For Calderón, COP 16 is both a logistical and political challenge. However, a successful outcome could bring dramatic changes to improve Mexico’s global image.

It’s interesting to note the Mexican government has moved the climate conference from the polluted Mexico City, to the beautiful resort area of Cancún. The beaches and crashing waves should provide a better backdrop for the conference than Denmark’s frigid temperatures and snow. Face it: global warming conferences should only be held in regions where it’s warm in December. And the Yucatan has faced more than its share of disasters due in part to rising ocean temperatures, including hurricanes and dying coral reefs offshore.

Perhaps Americans will pay more attention because of their proximity to and familiarity with Cancún, but I doubt it. No worries, the Green Detectives will be there. And we’ll continue following the climate issue here throughout 2010. –Kevin Tuerff

Last Call For Stronger Emissions Targets. Pretty Please?

December 23rd, 2009

As we arrived in Copenhagen December 9, something called a “Copenhagen Accord” was only a glint in the eye of climate negotiators representing more than 190 countries at COP15. Considered disappointing and vague, this Accord is better than “a total collapse” of negotiations many feared on the last day of the two-week conference. Actually, COP15 spilled an extra day into Saturday, December 19, with a still-unprecedented outcome and 115 bleary-eyed heads of state heading home. The point of the Green Detectives blog is to demystify key elements central to climate talks, and the Copenhagen Accord is now one of them. So here you go.

The Copenhagen Accord is a three-page document that:

  • Gives a January 31, 2010, deadline to developed countries like the US to commit to 2020 emissions reduction targets. It gives the same deadline to developing countries to outline their “mitigation” actions. Mitigation basically refers to tactics, such as preventing deforestation, which reduce carbon emissions. President Obama has already committed the US to a 17% reduction by 2020. We heard many countries were strongly disappointed he didn’t bring something new to the table during his Friday morning Copenhagen speech. Could the US have more robust emissions targets if a Senate climate bill should pass before January 31? See blog below for Kevin’s outlook on 2010.
  • Establishes a Copenhagen Green Climate Fund of $30 billion for 2010-2020 for adaptation and mitigation funds to developing countries from developed countries, and $100 billion per year by 2020. You can brush up on Adaptation and Climate Finance by watching our Green Detectives Decoder Videos.
  • Acknowledges REDD and Technology Transfer as viable mitigation tactics. You can also watch our videos on these two topics.
  • Cites the need to prevent a 2C rise in global temperatures and calls for an assessment of the implementation of the Accord in 2015, when negotiators could consider strengthening the long-term goal of preventing a 1.5C rise in temperatures.
  • Does not call for a legally binding agreement in 2010. This fell off the table in the 11th hour of COP15 and was a huge disappointment to many, especially countries like Tuvalu that are most vulnerable to the effects of climate change.
  • Is “noted by” but not an official agreement of the COP.
  • Has been called a huge disappointment but does not mean more solid direction and traction will not be found by negotiators before the the end of the next COP meeting, slated for Mexico City in December 2010.
  • Is available for you to read for yourself on the UNFCCC Web site.

What’s Next for Climate? German Beer, Tequila Protocol

December 23rd, 2009

Note: If you’re unfamiliar with any of the terms below, see our climate decoder.

Most everyone wants a legally binding agreement among nations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and funding for climate adaptation and mitigation in poor countries. The (next) path to a treaty in 2010 should look something like this:

JANUARY 31, 2010 Deadline for countries to sign onto the Copenhagen Accord. Developing countries must declare to the UNFCCC their baseline GHGs and reduction commitments to achieve by 2020. No submission, no money for climate aid from the new $30 billion pool donated by rich countries.

FEBRUARY THROUGH APRIL, 2010 All Democratic leaders in Congress are predicting successful passage of an energy and climate bill. Al Gore predicted legislation would be finally passed by the next Earth Day (April 22). Such a law would provide the US with tremendous leverage and credibility for developing a new climate Protocol (treaty).

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MAY 31 to JUNE 10, 2010 Meeting of the government climate ministers at the UNFCCC headquarters in Bonn, Germany. This meeting promises to be just as controversial as COP 15 in Copenhagen. Perhaps a visit to the Hofbrauhaus for beers would loosen tensions? The UN must determine a new negotiating process that does not rely on approving texts by consensus of 192 countries. The outcome will predict the likelihood of a new treaty being developed at COP 16 in Mexico City in December. Closely watching will be the Major Economies Forum (a group of the world’s 20 largest economies, who are responsible for the vast majority of GHG emissions). This group could decide to take their commitments and climate investments and go play by themselves without the burden of the UN.
bicentenario
November 29 to December 10, 2010
The sixteenth Conference of Parties (COP 16) will be held in Mexico, D.F. After witnessing the complete meltdown in Copenhagen, some wonder if the Mexicans wish they hadn’t agreed to host the meeting. Interesting to note, the US government is making a major contribution to Mexico to help them pay for the meeting logistics, security.

A friend suggested there would be less fighting among large v. small countries if everyone kicked back and had a few drinks together in Mexico. It would forever be known as “THE TEQUILLA PROTOCOL.”