Posts Tagged ‘Copenhagen’

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.

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

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).

logo

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.”

Anticlima(c)tic?

December 19th, 2009

Two weeks. Five pages. Is this what the world had hoped for? Is it enough to prevent the 2C rise in global temps? Read the “Copenhagen Accord,” as posted on the UNFCCC Web site. It may not be the final document but you can get an idea of where final negotiations were headed today. Key pieces are consistent with feedback (revisiting items in January 2010) I received by an NGO whose husband had been inside Bella Center for 36 hours and arrived back to the hotel for some much-needed rest in early afternoon.

The Bosses Away, But Work Continues at COP15 Without Sleep

December 19th, 2009
US Climate negotiators Jonathan Pershing and Todd Stern on the extra day at COP 15.

US Climate negotiators Jonathan Pershing and Todd Stern on the extra day at COP 15.

When Barack Obama and other world leaders left Copenhagen last night, most believed the Copenhagen Accord would be passed within hours. It didn’t.

It’s almost tradition that the conference continues into an extra day. But this time, the wheels almost fell off the bus.

Hours of additional speeches went into the night, included heated discussions and emotional debate. Developing nations suggested the final COP 15 agreement was so weak, it wasn’t worth passing.

In the morning, there were several proposals to amend the final document to put some teeth back into the agreement. Although many countries agrees that each country should go home and adopt their own laws in 2010 consistent with the Copenhagen Accord, which would make having a global treaty a lot easier than the Kyoto Treaty. But now that language is gone, even though the US was okay with it.

UN Secretary General

UN Secretary General Ban ki-Moon

With the 190 countries split on some of the final amendments, UN Secretary General Ban ki-Moon was summoned to the plenary to give the remaining sleepless negotiators a pep talk. He said, “We have taken a significant step. The agreement will not satisfy all. But I believe that through this adoption of Copenhagen Accord, you will be able to get everything you need. This is a significant deal. You have agreed to all the four of the benchmarks for success. We must turn this into a legally binding treaty next year. We know this will not be easy. The road ahead is still very long. Climate change remains the defining challenge of our time. It is a journey we must make together.”

It’s Noon in Copenhagen, and rambling speeches continue.

What’s In An “Accord”?

December 18th, 2009

With minutes and not hours or days left for COP15 (which was supposed to conclude today), a “Copenhagen Accord” has surfaced. A major feature is that it removes the deadline of 2010 for a legally binding agreement. However, according to a draft published by The Washington Post, the Copenhagen Accord would call for a reassessment by 2016 for “strengthening the long term goal to limit the increase of long term global average temperature to 1.5 degrees.” Scientist have called to prevent a 2 Celcius rise in temperatures.

But why an “Accord” versus a Protocol? Visit our Green Detectives timeline and UNFCCC and you’ll see when the rules for the Kyoto Protocol were adopted in 2001, they became known as the “Marrakesh Accords.” Backing up still further, the UNFCCC was established in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 to encourage the world to reduce GHGs. And the Kyoto Protocol was negotiated in 1997, committing ratifying countries to 5.2% GHG emissions reductions over 1990 levels. The US signed the Kyoto Protocol but the Senate never ratified it. Now, fast forward to Copenhagen. US signs an accord? And what will be the specifics of what is expected to be a very slim agreement document? The US House passed climate legislation in June this year, but what will the Senate do with it’s climate bill? Deja-vu?

Obama at COP15: No transparency “doesn’t make sense”

December 18th, 2009

obamaOverview

At roughly 5:40 a.m. CST time, President Obama told climate negotiators at the Plenary Session, “I don’t know how you have an international agreement without sharing information. That doesn’t make sense.” Obama followed Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao’s address, and both the US and China seemed to say the same thing — we’ve got our act together, why doesn’t everybody else? Obama talked about America’s investment in a green economy, our renewed leadership in climate negotiations, and our collective $100 billion investment with other major economies in climate finance for poor countries. He said our move to a clean energy economy helps national security by reducing our dependence on foreign oil, that negotiators need to move from posturing to action, and that no country will get everything it wants: “There are those developing countries that want aid with no strings attached, and who think that the most advanced nations should pay a higher price. And there are those advanced nations who think that developing countries cannot absorb this assistance, or that the world’s fastest-growing emitters should bear a greater share of the burden.” It was roughly a 10 minute speech without once mentioning the word Kyoto — a big contingency point between rich and poor countries these past two weeks in Copenhagen. “We’re ready to get this done today but there has to be movement on all sides,” he said.

 

Transcript: Kevin just received full remarks from the State Department and they are pasted below:

Remarks of President Barack Obama—As Prepared for Delivery
Copenhagen Summit
Copenhagen, Denmark
December 18, 2009

Good morning. It’s an honor to for me to join this distinguished group of leaders from nations around the world. We come together here in Copenhagen because climate change poses a grave and growing danger to our people. You would not be here unless you – like me – were convinced that this danger is real. This is not fiction, this is science. Unchecked, climate change will pose unacceptable risks to our security, our economies, and our planet. That much we know.

So the question before us is no longer the nature of the challenge – the question is our capacity to meet it. For while the reality of climate change is not in doubt, our ability to take collective action hangs in the balance.

I believe that we can act boldly, and decisively, in the face of this common threat. And that is why I have come here today.

As the world’s largest economy and the world’s second largest emitter, America bears our share of responsibility in addressing climate change, and we intend to meet that responsibility. That is why we have renewed our leadership within international climate negotiations, and worked with other nations to phase out fossil fuel subsidies. And that is why we have taken bold action at home – by making historic investments in renewable energy; by putting our people to work increasing efficiency in our homes and buildings; and by pursuing comprehensive legislation to transform to a clean energy economy.

These actions are ambitious, and we are taking them not simply to meet our global responsibilities. We are convinced that changing the way that we produce and use energy is essential to America’s economic future – that it will create millions of new jobs, power new industry, keep us competitive, and spark new innovation. And we are convinced that changing the way we use energy is essential to America’s national security, because it will reduce our dependence on foreign oil, and help us deal with some of the dangers posed by climate change.

So America is going to continue on this course of action no matter what happens in Copenhagen. But we will all be stronger and safer and more secure if we act together. That is why it is in our mutual interest to achieve a global accord in which we agree to take certain steps, and to hold each other accountable for our commitments.

After months of talk, and two weeks of negotiations, I believe that the pieces of that accord are now clear.

First, all major economies must put forward decisive national actions that will reduce their emissions, and begin to turn the corner on climate change. I’m pleased that many of us have already done so, and I’m confident that America will fulfill the commitments that we have made: cutting our emissions in the range of 17 percent by 2020, and by more than 80 percent by 2050 in line with final legislation.

Second, we must have a mechanism to review whether we are keeping our commitments, and to exchange this information in a transparent manner. These measures need not be intrusive, or infringe upon sovereignty. They must, however, ensure that an accord is credible, and that we are living up to our obligations. For without such accountability, any agreement would be empty words on a page.

Third, we must have financing that helps developing countries adapt, particularly the least-developed and most vulnerable to climate change. America will be a part of fast-start funding that will ramp up to $10 billion in 2012. And, yesterday, Secretary Clinton made it clear that we will engage in a global effort to mobilize $100 billion in financing by 2020, if – and only if – it is part of the broader accord that I have just described.

Mitigation. Transparency. And financing. It is a clear formula – one that embraces the principle of common but differentiated responses and respective capabilities. And it adds up to a significant accord – one that takes us farther than we have ever gone before as an international community.

The question is whether we will move forward together, or split apart. This is not a perfect agreement, and no country would get everything that it wants. There are those developing countries that want aid with no strings attached, and who think that the most advanced nations should pay a higher price. And there are those advanced nations who think that developing countries cannot absorb this assistance, or that the world’s fastest-growing emitters should bear a greater share of the burden.

We know the fault lines because we’ve been imprisoned by them for years. But here is the bottom line: we can embrace this accord, take a substantial step forward, and continue to refine it and build upon its foundation. We can do that, and everyone who is in this room will be a part of an historic endeavor – one that makes life better for our children and grandchildren.

Or we can again choose delay, falling back into the same divisions that have stood in the way of action for years. And we will be back having the same stale arguments month after month, year after year – all while the danger of climate change grows until it is irreversible.

There is no time to waste. America has made our choice. We have charted our course, we have made our commitments, and we will do what we say. Now, I believe that it’s time for the nations and people of the world to come together behind a common purpose.

We must choose action over inaction; the future over the past – with courage and faith, let us meet our responsibility to our people, and to the future of our planet. Thank you.

Did Copenhagen Live Up to Expectations?

December 18th, 2009

Picture 3Below is a column I wrote for EnvironmentalLeader.com, published today.

(COPENHAGEN) In November, I responded to a GlobeScan survey of 770 climate change experts. It was fielded right before the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP15) to gauge the expectations of NGOs, research organizations, businesses and governments in 104 countries.

The results were just published, and I found it enlightening to compare them to my experiences here in Copenhagen, where I served as a delegate for the U.S. Business Council for Sustainable Development. This is what I found:

Europe was expected to lead

In November, fully 80 percent of the respondents expected Europe would play the leadership role here at COP15 in setting ambitious targets to address climate change as quickly as possible.

As for the EU taking charge? Based on what I’ve seen, I’d give them a “B” so far. The dynamics are changing with all the heads of state here, and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has been playing a key role, but initial mistrust of the developed world’s intentions have created a gap that is hard to bridge. COP 15 president Connie Hedegaard and UNFCCC executive secretary Yvo de Boer deserve a medal for managing protests and posturing, while exerting pressure on countries to find consensus.

The White House and US State Department deserve tremendous credit for mobilizing federal funding commitments and problem solving with the major economies.

We all saw the financial obstacles

For those who participated in the survey, only 16 percent believed an agreement on managing the money committed to helping the developing countries would come to fruition. While it’s looking like we might have all been right, I don’t think any of us expected the G77 to play hardball over such issues (hear the interview I got after the walkout with Obed Bapela, South Africa Member of Parliament.)

The mood of most everyone in Copenhagen was hopeful about prospects for implementing clean energy solutions to boost the world economy.

Of course, we thought the focus would be on the BRIC + Europe and America

Even the structure of the survey focused on what the Brazilians, Russians, Indians and Chinese (BRIC) would do, as compared to the U.S. and EU. Since the weekend, however, it has been the much larger bloc of traditionally under-considered players within the G77 who have been making the headlines. From the walkout, to protests and speeches, the rift between the “haves” and the “have nots” couldn’t be more clear.

Many (73 percent) wanted a comprehensive, ambitious agreement; few (8 percent) expected it

The survey showed most respondents (57 percent) were expecting COP15 to produce a political agreement in principle with negotiations for a legally binding agreement continuing into 2010. The expectation was that wouldn’t happen without strong alignment between China and the U.S. — ostensibly the two leaders of the developing vs. developed worlds.

Many will be disappointed with the outcome of COP 15, but the reality is great progress has been made by the Obama administration in less than one year, and there is great optimism about passage of legislation in the US, with another shot at a new UN global protocol in 2010, in Mexico.

HP Discusses COP 15 UN Climate Wall

December 17th, 2009

Hillary Clinton: US Will Help Raise $100 Billion for Climate Finance

December 17th, 2009

phenhallSecretary of State Hillary Clinton just announced at COP15 that by 2020 the United States will help raise $100 billion annually to aid poor countries with climate change. Clinton said this is contingent on all major economies contributing and helping to seal a climate deal with transparency from all parties.

Momentum is certainly building from President Obama’s cabinet here in Copenhagen with unprecendented US climate aid to developing countries practically growing by the day. Monday: Energy Sec Chu pledges $350 million in clean energy technologies; Wednesday: Ag Sec Vilsack pledges $1 billion in deforestation funds; Thursday: Clinton pledges $100 billion in climate finance; Friday: What will President Obama pledge? Watch our Climate Finance video to learn how our commitments fit into the big picture of climate negotiations. With heads of state in Copenhagen now, is this just the kind of commitment that will help alleviate tensions between poor and rich nations and make a climate treaty happen by tomorrow (or as negotiations likely spill into the weekend)?