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Friday, 19 June 2020
World has six months to avert climate crisis, says energy expert.
The cooling tower of a coal-fired power plant in Datteln, Germany.
Photograph: Ina Fassbender/AFP/Getty Images
The world has only six months in which to change the course of the
climate crisis and prevent a post-lockdown rebound in greenhouse gas
emissions that would overwhelm efforts to stave off climate catastrophe,
one of the world’s foremost energy experts has warned.
“This year is the last time we have, if we are not to see a carbon rebound,” said Fatih Birol, executive director of the International Energy Agency.
Governments are planning to spend $9tn (£7.2tn) globally in the next
few months on rescuing their economies from the coronavirus crisis, the
IEA has calculated. The stimulus packages created this year will
determine the shape of the global economy for the next three years,
according to Birol, and within that time emissions must start to fall
sharply and permanently, or climate targets will be out of reach.
“The next three years will determine the course of the next 30 years
and beyond,” Birol told the Guardian. “If we do not [take action] we
will surely see a rebound in emissions. If emissions rebound, it is very
difficult to see how they will be brought down in future. This is why
we are urging governments to have sustainable recovery packages.”
Carbon dioxide emissions plunged by a global average of 17% in April, compared with last year, but have since surged again to within about 5% of last year’s levels.
In a report published on Thursday, the IEA – the world’s gold standard for energy analysis - set out the first global blueprint for a green recovery,
focusing on reforms to energy generation and consumption. Wind and
solar power should be a top focus, the report advised, alongside energy
efficiency improvements to buildings and industries, and the
modernisation of electricity grids.
Creating jobs must be the priority for countries where millions have
been thrown into unemployment by the impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic
and ensuing lockdowns. The IEA’s analysis shows that targeting green
jobs – such as retrofitting buildings to make them more energy
efficient, putting up solar panels and constructing wind farms – is more
effective than pouring money into the high-carbon economy.
Sam Fankhauser, executive director of the Grantham Research Institute
on climate change at the London School of Economics, who was not
involved in the report, said: “Building efficiency ticks all the
recovery boxes – shovel-ready, employment intensive, a high economic
multiplier, and is absolutely key for zero carbon [as it is] a
hard-to-treat sector, and has big social benefits, in the form of lower
fuel bills.”
He warned that governments must not try to “preserve existing
jobs in formaldehyde” through furlough schemes and other efforts to
keep people in employment, but provide retraining and other
opportunities for people to “move into the jobs of the future”.
Calls for a green recovery globally have now come from experts, economists, health professionals, educators, climate campaigners and politicians. While some governments are poised to take action – for instance, the EU has pledged to make its European green deal the centrepiece of its recovery – the money spent so far has tended to prop up the high-carbon economy.
At least $33bn has been directed towards airlines, with few or no green strings attached, according to the campaigning group Transport and Environment. According to analyst company Bloomberg New Energy Finance,
more than half a trillion dollars worldwide – $509bn – is to be poured
into high-carbon industries, with no conditions to ensure they reduce
their carbon output.
Only about $12.3bn of the spending announced by late last month was
set to go towards low-carbon industries, and a further $18.5bn into
high-carbon industries provided they achieve climate targets.
In the first tranches of spending, governments “had an excuse” for
failing to funnel money to carbon-cutting industries, said Birol,
because they were reacting to a sudden and unexpected crisis. “The first
recovery plans were more aimed at creating firewalls round the
economy,” he explained.
But governments were still targeting high-carbon investment, Birol
warned. He pointed to IEA research showing that by the end of May the
amount invested in coal-fired power plants in Asia had accelerated
compared with last year. “There are already signs of a rebound [in
emissions],” he said.
Climate campaigners called on ministers to heed the IEA report and
set out green recovery plans. Jamie Peters, campaigns director at
Friends of the Earth, said: “A post-Covid world must be a fair one. It
will only be equitable if the government prioritises health, wellbeing
and opportunity for all parts of society. As if the case was not
compelling enough in a dangerously heating planet, it is even more
urgent post-Covid.”
Putting
the IEA’s recommendations into action would boost the economy, added
Rosie Rogers, head of green recovery at Greenpeace UK. “Government
putting money behind sustainable solutions really is an economic
no-brainer. It can see us build a recovery that both tackles the climate
emergency and improves people’s lives through cleaner air and lower
bills.”
Investors were also keen to put private sector money into a green
recovery, alongside government stimulus spending, said Stephanie
Pfeifer, chief executive of the Institutional Investor Group on Climate
Change, representing funds and asset managers with $26tn in assets. “The
IEA has shown [a green recovery] is not only desirable, but
economically astute. Investors are fully committed to playing their part
in this process.”
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