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Saturday, 17 November 2018
Policies of China, Russia and Canada threaten 5C climate change, study finds
Vendors near a state-owned coal-fired power plant in China.
Photograph: Kevin Frayer/Getty Images
China, Russia and Canada’s current climate policies would drive the
world above a catastrophic 5C of warming by the end of the century,
according to a study that ranks the climate goals of different
countries.
The US and Australia are only slightly behind with both pushing the
global temperature rise dangerously over 4C above pre-industrial levels
says the paper, while even the EU, which is usually seen as a climate
leader, is on course to more than double the 1.5C that scientists say is a moderately safe level of heating.
The study, published on Friday in the journal Nature Communications,
assesses the relationship between each nation’s ambition to cut
emissions and the temperature rise that would result if the world
followed their example.
The aim of the paper is to inform climate negotiators as they begin a
two-year process of ratcheting up climate commitments, which currently
fall far short of the 1.5-to-2C goal set in France three years ago.
The related website
also serves as a guide to how nations are sharing the burden of
responding to the greatest environmental threat humankind has ever
faced.
Among
the major economies, the study shows India is leading the way with a
target that is only slightly off course for 2C. Less developed countries
are generally more ambitious, in part because they have fewer
factories, power plants and cars, which means they have lower emissions
to rein in.
On the opposite side of the spectrum are the industrial powerhouse
China and major energy exporters who are doing almost nothing to limit
carbon dioxide emissions. These include Saudi Arabia (oil), Russia (gas)
and Canada, which is drawing vast quantities of dirty oil from tar sands.
Fossil fuel lobbies in these countries are so powerful that government
climate pledges are very weak, setting the world on course for more than
5C of heating by the end of the century.
Only slightly better are the group of countries that are pushing the
planet beyond 4C. Among them are the US, which has huge emissions from
energy, industry and agriculture somewhat offset by promises of modest
cuts and more renewables. Australia, which remains heavily dependent on coal exports, is also in this category.
The wealthy shopping societies of Europe fare slightly better –
largely because emissions on products are calculated at the source of
manufacture rather than the point of consumption – but the authors of
the paper say their actions lag behind their promises to set a positive
example.
“It is interesting is to see how far out some countries are, even
those that are considered leaders in the climate mitigation narrative,”
said the study’s author, Yann Robiou du Pont of Melbourne University.
The study is likely to be controversial. Under the Paris agreement,
there is no top-down consensus on what is a fair share of
responsibility. Instead each nation sets its own bottom-up targets
according to a number of different factors, including political will,
level of industrialisation, ability to pay, population size, historical
responsibility for emissions. Almost every government, the authors say,
selects an interpretation of equity that serves their own interests and
allows them to achieve a relative gain on other nations.
To get around these differing concepts of fairness, the paper
assesses each nation by the least stringent standards they set
themselves and then extrapolates this to the world. In doing so, the
authors say they can “operationalise disagreements”.
Taking account of the different interpretations, they say the world
needs to commit to a virtual 1.4C target in order to achieve a 2C goal.
They hope their equity metric can be used in next month’s UN climate
talks in Katowice and in climate litigation cases.
The
authors said the study could in future be extended to the subnational
level, such as individual US states. They also note that a few key
sectors are currently omitted, including land-use change (which is
fundamental in rapidly deforesting nations such as Brazil, Argentina and
Indonesia), international shipping and aviation.
Brazil is losing large tracts of natural forest to
activities such as mining, logging and agriculture. Photograph: Carl de
Souza/AFP/Getty Images
Although the study highlights the huge gap between political will and
scientific alarm, Robiou du Pont said it should inspire rather than
dispirit people.
“The positive outcome of this study is that we have a metric
to assess the ratcheting up of ambition. Civil society, experts and
decision-makers can use this to hold their governments accountable, and
possibly undertake climate litigation cases as happened recently in the Netherlands,”
he said. “This metric translates the lack of ambition on a global scale
to a national scale. If we look at the goal of trying to avoid damage
to the Earth, then I am pessimistic as this is already happening. But
this should be a motivation to ratchet up ambition and avoid global
warming as much and as rapidly as possible. Every fraction of a degree
will have a big impact.”
Commenting on the study, other academics said it could be used by
anyone to show how climate action can be navigated in a world in which
each country ranks itself based on what they consider to be fair.
“This paper provides a means for countries to check how their
contribution might be perceived by other countries and thus judge
whether they are perceived as a climate leader or laggard,” said Joeri
Rogelj of Imperial College London.
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