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Thursday, 9 November 2017
The seven megatrends that could beat global warming: 'There is reason for hope'
Until recently the battle to avert catastrophic climate change –
floods, droughts, famine, mass migrations – seemed to be lost. But with
the tipping point just years away, the tide is finally turning, thanks
to innovations ranging from cheap renewables to lab-grown meat and
electric airplanes
A wind farm off the coast of Sussex.
Photograph: Mike Hewitt/Getty Images
‘Everybody
gets paralysed by bad news because they feel helpless,” says Christiana
Figueres, the former UN climate chief who delivered the landmark Paris
climate change agreement. “It is so in our personal lives, in our
national lives and in our planetary life.”
But it is becoming increasingly clear that it does not need to be all
bad news: a series of fast-moving global megatrends, spurred by trillion-dollar investments,
indicates that humanity might be able to avert the worst impacts of
global warming. From trends already at full steam, including renewable
energy, to those just now hitting the big time, such as mass-market
electric cars, to those just emerging, such as plant-based alternatives
to meat, these trends show that greenhouse gas emissions can be halted.
“If we were seeing linear progress, I would say good, but we’re not
going to make it in time,” says Figueres, now the convener of the Mission 2020 initiative,
which warns that the world has only three years to get carbon emissions
on a downward curve and on the way to beating global warming. “But the
fact is we are seeing progress that is growing exponentially, and that
is what gives me the most reason for hope.”
No one is saying the battle to avert catastrophic climate change –
floods, droughts, famine, mass migrations – has been won. But these
megatrends show the battle has not yet been lost, and that the tide is
turning in the right direction. “The important thing is to reach a
healthy balance where we recognise that we are seriously challenged,
because we really have only three years left to reach the tipping point,” says Figueres. “But at the same time, the fact is we are already seeing many, many positive trends.”
Michael Liebreich, the founder of Bloomberg New Energy Finance,
agrees. “The good news is we are way better than we thought we could
be. We are not going to get through this without damage. But we can
avoid the worst. I am optimistic, but there is a long way to go.”
Also cautiously hopeful is climate economist Nicholas Stern at the
London School of Economics. “These trends are the start of something
that might be enough – the two key words are ‘start’ and ‘might’.” He
says the global climate negotiations, continuing this week in Germany
and aiming to implement the Paris deal, are crucial: “The acceleration
embodied in the Paris agreement is going to be critical.”
THE TRENDS 1. Methane: getting to the meat
A lab-grown burger. Photograph: David Parry/PA
Carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels is the main greenhouse gas,
but methane and nitrous oxide are more potent and, unlike CO2, still rising. The major source is livestock farming, in particular belching cattle and their manure.
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The
world’s appetite for meat and dairy foods is rising as people’s incomes
rise, but the simple arithmetic is that unless this is radically
curbed, there is no way to beat global warming.
The task looks daunting – people hate being told what to eat. However,
just in the last year, a potential solution has burst on to the market:
plant-based meat, which has a tiny environmental footprint.
What sounds like an oxymoron – food that looks and tastes just as
good as meat or dairy products but is made from plants – has attracted
heavy investment. The buzz is particularly loud in the US, where Bill Gates has backed two plant-based burger companies and Eric Schmidt, formerly CEO of Google, believes plant-based foods can make a “meaningful dent” in tackling climate change.
Perhaps even more telling is that major meat and dairy companies are
now piling in with investments and acquisitions, such as the US’s
biggest meat processor, Tyson, and multinational giants Danone and Nestlé. The Chinese government has just put $300m (£228m) into Israeli companies producing lab-grown meat, which could also cut emissions. New plant-based products,
from chicken to fish to cheese, are coming out every month. “We are in
the nascent stage,” says Alison Rabschnuk at the US nonprofit group the Good Food Institute. “But there’s a lot of money moving into this area.”
Plant-based meat and dairy produce is not only environmentally
friendly, but also healthier and avoids animal welfare concerns, but
these benefits will not make them mass-market, she says: “We don’t
believe that is what is going to make people eat plant-based food. We
believe the products themselves need to be competitive on taste, price
and convenience – the three attributes people use when choosing what to
eat.”
Plant-based milks – soya, almond, oat and more – have led the way and
are now about 10% of the market and a billion-dollar business in the
US. But in the past year, sales of other meat and dairy substitutes have
climbed 8%, with some specific lines, such as yoghurt, shooting up 55%.
“I think the writing’s on the wall,” says Rabschnuk. Billionaire
entrepreneur Richard Branson agrees.
“I believe that in 30 years or so we will no longer need to kill any
animals and that all meat will either be [lab] or plant-based, taste the
same and also be much healthier for everyone.”
2. Renewable energy: time to shine
Solar panel installation. Photograph: Kristian Buus/Corbis via Getty Images
The most advanced of the megatrends is the renewable energy
revolution. Production costs for solar panels and wind turbines have
plunged, by 90% in the past decade for solar, for example, and are continuing to fall.
As a result, in many parts of the world they are already the cheapest
electricity available and installation is soaring: two-thirds of all new
power in 2016 was renewable.
This extraordinary growth has confounded expectations: the respected
International Energy Agency’s annual projections have anticipated linear
growth for solar power every year for the past decade. In reality,
growth has been exponential. China is leading the surge but the impact
is being felt around the world: in Germany last week there was so much wind power that customers got free electricity.
In the US, enthusiasm for green energy has not been dented by
President Donald Trump committing to repeal key climate legislation: $30bn has been invested since he signed an executive order in March. “I am no longer concerned about electric power,” says Figueres.
3. King coal: dead or dying
The
flipside of the renewables boom is the death spiral of coal, the
filthiest of fossil fuels. Production now appears to have peaked in
2013. The speed of its demise has stunned analysts. In 2013, the IEA expected coal-burning to grow by 40% by 2040 – today it anticipates just 1%.
The cause is simple: solar and wind are cheaper. But the consequences
are enormous: in pollution-choked China, there are now no provinces
where new coal is needed, so the country has just mothballed plans for 151 plants. Bankruptcies have torn through the US coal industry and in the UK, where coal-burning began the industrial revolution, it has fallen from 40% of power supply to 2% in the past five years.
“Last year, I said if Asia builds what it says it is going to build,
we can kiss goodbye to 2C” – the internationally agreed limit for
dangerous climate change – says Liebreich. “Now we are showing coal
[plans] coming down.” But he warns there is more to do.
Solar and wind are cheaper than new coal, he says, but a second
tipping point is needed. That will occur when renewables are cheaper to
build than running existing coal plants, meaning that the latter shut
down. If renewable costs continue to fall as expected, this would happen
between 2030 and 2040. At that point, says Liebrich, “Why keep digging
coal out of the ground when you could just put up solar?”
4. Electric cars: in the fast lane
Vehicles being charged at China’s leading maker of
electric cars, BYD Co, in Shenzhen, China. Photograph: Qilai
Shen/Bloomberg/Getty Images
Slashing oil use – a third of all global energy – is a huge challenge
but a surging market for battery-powered cars is starting to bite,
driven in significant part by fast-growing concerns about urban air
pollution.
China,
again, is leading the way. It is selling as many electric cars every
month as Europe and the US combined, with many from home-grown companies
such as BYD. US-based Tesla is rolling out its more affordable Model 3
and in recent months virtually all major carmakers
have committed to an electric future, with Volvo and Jaguar Land Rover
announcing that they will end production of pure fossil-fuelled cars
within three years.
“We have a domino effect now,” says Figueres. These cars are “now
being made for the mass market and that is really what is going to make
the transformation”.
“I don’t think it is going to slow down,” says Viktor Irle, an
analyst at EV-volumes.com. Drivers can see the direction of travel, he
says, with a stream of choked cities and countries from Paris to India
announcing future bans on fossil-fuelled cars.
It is true that global sales of electric cars have now achieved
liftoff, quadrupling in the past three years, but they still make up
only 1.25% of all new car sales. However, if current growth rates
continue, as Irle expects, 80% of new cars will be electric by 2030.
The rapid rise of electric cars has left the oil giants, who have a lot to lose, playing catchup. The oil cartel Opec has increased its estimate of the number of electric cars operative in 2040 by five times
in the past year alone, with the IEA, ExxonMobil and BP all bumping up
their forecasts too. Heavy transport remains a challenge, but even here ships are experimenting with wind power and batteries. Short-haul electric airplanes are on the drawing board, too.
5. Batteries: lots in store
A lithium-ion battery. Photograph: Alamy
Batteries are key to electric cars and, by storing energy for when
the sun goes down or the wind stops blowing, they are also vital when it
comes to enabling renewable energy to reach its full potential. Here
too, a megatrend is crushing prices for lithium-ion batteries, which are
down 75% over the past six years. The International Renewable Energy
Agency expects further falls of 50-66% by 2030
and a massive increase in battery storage, linked to increasingly smart
and efficient digital power grids. In the UK alone, government advisers
say a smart grid could save bill-payers £8bn a year by 2030, as well as slashing carbon emissions.
Fears that lithium-ion, the technology that dominates today, cannot
be scaled up sufficiently are overblown, argues Liebreich, as the metal
is not rare. “I think lithium-ion is a banker in that you can be sure it
will get cheaper and you can be sure there is enough.” He is also
frustrated by frequent claims that a grid based on renewables and
storage cannot be cheap and reliable: “That stupidity and absolute
certainty is in inverse proportion to any knowledge of how you run an
electrical system.”
It is true, however, that batteries will not be the solution for
energy storage over weeks or months. For that, long-distance electricity
interconnectors are being built and the storage of the energy as gas is
also being explored.
6. Efficiency: negawatts over megawatts
A zero-carbon house. Photograph: Alamy
Just as important as the greening of energy is reducing demand by
boosting energy efficiency. It’s a no-brainer in climate policy, but it
can be very tricky to make happen, as it requires action from millions
of people.
Nonetheless,
good progress is being made in places such as the EU, where efficiency
in homes, transport and industry has improved by about 20% since 2000.
Improving the efficiency of gadgets and appliances through better
standards is surprisingly important: a new UN Environment Programme report shows it makes the biggest impact of any single action bar rolling out wind and solar power.
But again, continued progress is vital. “We need to drive energy
efficiency very, very hard, even for European countries,” says Prof
Kevin Anderson at the University of Manchester. “We could power down
European energy use by about 40% in something like 10-15 years, just by
making the most efficient appliances available the new minimum.”
In countries with cool winters, better insulation is also needed,
particularly as a fossil fuel – natural gas – currently provides a lot
of heating. “What is a crime is every time a building is renovated but
not renovated to really high standards,” says Liebreich, who thinks
labelling such homes as “zero-energy-bill” homes, not “zero-carbon”
homes, would help overcome opposition.
One sector that is lagging on energy efficiency is industry, but technology to capture and bury CO2 from plants is being tested and ways to clean up cement-making are also being explored.
7. Forests: seeing the wood
The
destruction of forests around the world for ranching and farming, as
well as for timber, causes about 10% of greenhouse gas emissions. This
is the biggest megatrend not yet pointing in the right direction: annual
tree losses have roughly doubled since 2000.
This is particularly worrying as stopping deforestation and planting
new trees is, in theory at least, among the cheapest and fastest ways of
cutting carbon emissions. But it is not getting the support it needs,
says Michael Wolosin at Forest Climate Analytics. “Climate policy is
massively underfunding forests – they receive only about 2% of global
climate finance.” Furthermore, the $2.3bn committed to forests by rich
nations and multilateral institutions since 2010 is tiny compared with
the funding for the sectors that drive deforestation. “Brazil and
Indonesia’s governments alone invested $276bn in the same timeframe, in
just the four key driver commodities: palm oil, soy, beef and timber,”
says Franziska Haupt at Climate Focus.
In fact, new research has shown that better land management could deliver a third of all the carbon cuts the world needs,
and Wolosin says there are some grounds for hope that new forests can
be planted. “Achieving large-scale forestation is not just theoretical.
We know we can do it because a few countries have done it successfully.”
In the past two decades, tree-planting in China, India and South
Korea has removed more than 12bn tonnes of CO2 from the atmosphere –
three times the entire European Union’s annual emissions, Wolosin says.
This action was driven by fears about flooding and food supply, meaning
that global warming needs to be seen as equally urgent in this sector.
Regrowing forests can also play a crucial role in sucking CO2 out of the
atmosphere, which is likely to be necessary after 2050, unless very
sharp cuts are made now.
The race against time
Will
these megatrends move fast enough to avoid the worst of climate change?
Opinions vary and Anderson is among the most hawkish. He says it
remains possible for now, but is pessimistic that the action will be
taken. “We’re pointing in the right direction but not moving [there]. We
have to not just pursue renewables and electric vehicles and so forth,
we have to actively close down the incumbent fossil fuel industry.”
Stern is cautiously optimistic, saying that what has changed in
recent years is the realisation that green economic growth in the only
long-term option: “There is no long-run high-carbon growth story because
it creates an environment so hostile that it turns development
backwards.
“There are some tremendous developments so I am very confident now we
can do this, but the change, attractive as it is, has to be radical,”
he says. “Will we have the political and economic understanding and
commitment to get there? I hope so.”
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