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The Way to Break the Climate Deadlock
AP Photo
This week, leaders are meeting in Italy to advance a new climate-change protocol. Tony Blair says we know what we have to do and offers seven proven solutions.
On July 9, the leaders of the world’s largest economies will meet in L’Aquila, Italy, in the Major Economies Forum to discuss progress toward a new global climate agreement. In just six months, a deal is supposed to be struck in Copenhagen and the MEF meeting comes at a vital moment in the negotiations. When many of the same leaders met in April to address the economic crisis, they correctly pledged to do “whatever is necessary.” The same spirit needs to animate the meeting in L’Aquila.
Fully 70 percent of the reductions needed by 2020 can be achieved by investing in three areas: increasing energy efficiency, reducing deforestation, and from use of
lower-carbon energy sources.
There is enormous goodwill to do so. The new U.S. administration is supporting strong American action. China is setting ambitious targets for reducing energy intensity and making massive investments in renewable energy. India has put forward its own action plan. Europe has set a 2020 goal of cutting emissions by 30 percent below 1990 levels if there is an ambitious global agreement. Japan has published its proposals for major carbon reductions. Across the world, commitments are forthcoming.
But practical challenges still remain. What is being asked for is that global emissions be less than half their 1990 levels by 2050, having peaked before 2020. Since emissions from developing countries are on the whole lower than those of the developed world and will need to continue to rise in the short term as they maintain economic growth and address poverty, it has been proposed that developed countries cut emissions by at least 80 percent of the1990 level by 2050, with major steps toward this over the next decade. Developing countries will also need to play their part, significantly slowing emissions growth and peaking in the coming decades. For the U.S., such commitments would mean cutting emissions to around one-tenth per capita of what they are today, while for China it would mean creating a new low-carbon model of economic development. For all countries, this is a major challenge, a revolution, and implies a huge shift in policy.
Yet the good news is that if we focus on clear, practical, and achievable goals, major reductions can be made in order to ensure that, whatever the precise interim target, the world will fashion a radical new approach within a manageable timeframe. A new report from the Breaking the Climate Deadlock project, a strategic partnership between my office and The Climate Group, shows how major reductions even by 2020 are achievable if we focus action on certain key technologies, deploy policies that have been proven to work, and invest now for the development of those future technologies that will take time to mature.
Perhaps the most interesting fact to emerge is that fully 70 percent of the reductions needed by 2020 can be achieved by investing in three areas: increasing energy efficiency, reducing deforestation, and from use of lower-carbon energy sources, including nuclear and renewables. We also know that by implementing just seven proven policies—renewable energy standards (e.g. feed-in tariffs or renewable portfolio standards); industry efficiency measures; building codes; vehicle-efficiency standards; fuel carbon content standards; appliance standards, and policies for reduced emissions from deforestation and forest degradation—these reductions can be delivered. All seven policies have already been successfully implemented in countries around the world but need scaling up. While cap-and-trade systems or other means of creating a carbon price can help provide incentives for businesses to invest in low-carbon solutions, in the short term at least, it is these seven policy measures and direct action and investment by governments that will achieve the targets.
Longer-term, we will also need technologies such as carbon capture and storage (or CCS), expanded nuclear power, and new generations of solar energy, together with the development of technologies whose potential or even existence is still unknown. The important thing for Copenhagen is that decisions are taken now for investments that will yield benefits later. For example, the overwhelming majority of the new power stations in China and India—necessary to drive the industrialization that will lift hundreds of millions of people out of rural poverty—will be coal-fired. That is just a fact. So developing CCS or an alternative that allows coal to become clean energy, is essential for meeting the 2050 goal. But we need to invest now, seriously and through global collaboration, so that by 2020 we are in a position to scale CCS up or be ready deploy other alternatives.










What, no comments here? With all the chatter on other (less globally important) blogs, it's really interesting to see a complete absence of interest on this topic.......
Tony,
Great article,
Hopefully everybody will recognize that solving this problem is really to the benefit of everybody. Working on this problem is not an expense. It is an investment in a better future for all.
I also think that on a broader scale, and with the world having become evermore inter-connected, the international community should demand all governments around the world to be civil, legitimate, responsible and accountable not only to their own citizens but also to the world at large.
So, I believe that the third arm of the solution should be to do away with thugist dictatorships around the world who cannot be trusted to genuinely care about the balance of climate of our planet when they actually have the slightest care for their own people.
Tony, it is time that we do away with governments that do not respect the human rights of their own people and time to expect international accountability.
So, should you be in one of these positive meetings and you noticed a representative from a thugist government, rest assures that they are wasting your precious time.
Assured of your wisdom and intelligence, I am sure you will know them when you see them! And the point here is to stress the importance of international politics as it relates to resolving global climate issues.
Good luck !
I suggest that if Obama wants a second term as President he cancel his tickets to this event and focus on bringing down the unemployment rate here at home. As far as global warming is concerned, just put a tax on carbon fuel sources and be done with it. Unfortunatley, like all Politicians, you would rather hide behind phony cap and trade regimens that are ripe for mischief, then do the right thing. Obama is no exception.
And then for the rest of us:
http://www.powerscorecard.org/reduce_energy.cfm
Even if you think global warming is a conspiracy, these will save you money.
Thank you.
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