Much was left undone in Copenhagen, and the many loopholes in the climate accord could lead to rising emissions. But the conference averted disaster by keeping the UN climate negotiations alive, and some expressed hope that the growth of renewable energy technology may ultimately save the day.
by fred pearce
Did British climate
secretary Ed Miliband save the planet early on the final Saturday of
the Copenhagen conference? It sounds like a risible claim, especially
coming from a British journalist like myself. But hear me out.
At 7 a.m. on Saturday, with the conference 14 hours into overtime, the
visibly exhausted and procedurally confused chairman of the summit,
Danish Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen, cast a weary eye over the
surviving delegates from an all-night session. After listening to more
than 40 speeches from the floor and with dozens more delegates waiting
to be heard, Rasmussen said there was no consensus on adopting the
draft agreement produced by U.S. President Obama and 25 other heads of
state the previous day. “Therefore I propose that we...” Almost
certainly his next words would have been a recommendation to drop or
delete the text.
The rejection of what was already known as the Copenhagen Accord would
have been a catastrophic failure for both climate diplomacy and the
climate. The United Nations process to fight climate change, set in
train at the Earth Summit in Rio 17 years before, would have lain in
tatters. The climate equivalent of the collapse of the world trade
talks — the “Doha-isation of climate,” as one journalist quipped —
would have reverberated for years, unleashing accelerating emissions of
greenhouse gases and who knows what climatic tipping points in future
years.
Then up spoke Ed Miliband, younger brother of the more famous British
Foreign Secretary, David Miliband. “Point of order,” he called from the
floor, and asked for an adjournment of the meeting. Rasmussen looked
like a drowning man saved.
When the meeting resumed three hours later, with Rasmussen safely
tucked in bed and diagnosed as “exhausted” by UN Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon, a procedural formula had been devised. A new chairman moved
that the meeting “take note of the Copenhagen Accord,” with those
agreeing to it able to add their names to its title and make pledges to
stem their rising carbon dioxide emissions. The many critics of the
leaders’ draft agreement, mostly in Latin America and Africa, were
assuaged. The gavel fell. The accord was saved. Wild applause broke out.
The deadline for signing up to the Copenhagen Accord is February 1.
Developing nations among the signatories will then also be able to dip
into a “climate fund” created by the U.S. and other rich nations as
part of the accord. The fund will begin with $10 billion a year and, if
all goes according to their promises, will contain $100 billion a year
by 2020.
It may seem a bizarre way to conduct business. But had Miliband not
prevented Rasmussen from finishing his sentence, the accord would have
had no UN status, countries would not have been asked to commit to
emissions cuts, and the climate fund would have been stillborn. Other
ways may have been found to achieve some of the same ends. Money
usually talks. But the legitimacy of the UN process — the only basis on
which most nations agree to participate in action on climate change —
would have been lost.
The “noting” of the accord was a victory for climate diplomacy. And a
relief to the galaxy of world leaders — Barack Obama, Britain’s Gordon
Brown, Germany’s Angela Merkel, Russia’s Dmitry Medvedev, and Brazil’s
President Luis Inacio Lula da Silva, among them — who, hours before,
had prematurely claimed their work was done when they had agreed to the
draft among themselves.
Heading for the airport, they failed to realize the anger that leaders
not involved would feel about their exclusion from the dealmaking. And,
since the accord was merely “noted” by the conference and not adopted,
they had been wrong to claim before departure that, in the words of
Gordon Brown, “for the first time, 192 nations of the UN have reached
agreement on preventing warming beyond two degrees.” They did not. Only
a later, legally binding UN treaty — if that can be achieved in 2010 —
will accomplish that.
So the accord was a flawed diplomatic triumph. The show is still on the
road. But a triumph for the planet? Not so fast. Across the Bella
conference center, scientists who had evaded the tight attendance
restrictions on observers were crunching numbers. And the scientists
were gloomy.
The accord may set a goal to limit global warming to 2 degrees C (3.6
F), but it provides no emissions targets on how that should be
achieved. On the basis of the commitments so far informally made by
nations — which will be appended to the accord as countries sign it —
the best estimates are that it will set the world on track to warming
of between 3 and 3.5 degrees C, according to Michiel Schaeffer of the
consulting group, ECOFYS, and Niklas Hoehne of Climate Analytics, who
provided climate analysis for many nations at the conference.
Why this gap between rhetoric and reality? The first problem is the
targets themselves. High hopes that many nations would up their
promises in Copenhagen came to nothing. The U.S. would not go beyond
its pre-conference promise to cut emissions by 14 to 17 percent from
2005 to 2020 — which more or less wipes out its increases since 1990 —
the baseline used by the European Union for its pledge to cut by 20
percent. A European offer to go to 30 percent if others were generous
was not activated.
China stuck with its pre-conference pledge to cut carbon intensity —
that is, emissions per dollar of gross domestic product — by 40 to 45
percent between 2005 and 2020. That sounds good, but will not be enough
to halt rising Chinese emissions. And as Premier Wen Jiabao helpfully
told the conference, it is actually slightly less than the 46 percent
reduction achieved between 1990 and 2005. So, it is arguably no more
than business as usual.
India, Brazil, Mexico, South Africa, and others made similar pledges.
It is the first time that developing nations have offered to make cuts
in their
emissions. But all insisted that the targets, while genuine, were
voluntary and would not form part of any legally binding treaty. This
was the central standoff throughout a conference characterized by
repeated clashes on the issue between the U.S. and China. Hillary
Clinton called the international verification and “transparency” of
emissions promises, especially from China, a “deal breaker.” And so it
proved.
But beyond the targets lies a legal morass over the precise definitions
of what the target numbers mean. The text of the Copenhagen Accord
contains even more loopholes than the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, say analysts.
The environment group WWF — reaching roughly the same conclusions as
Climate Analytics and ECOFYS — calculates that rich-world promises to
make cuts of 15 to 19 percent in their collective emissions between
1990 and 2020 could, once the loopholes are taken into account, result
in an actual increase in emissions by 4 to 10 percent. Another
unpublished assessment by Simon Terry of the Sustainability Council of
New Zealand puts the increase at 2 to 8 percent.
The main loopholes are:
— Hot air. The
Kyoto Protocol gave Russia and other Eastern European countries rights
to emit far more CO2 than they needed because of the collapse of their
industries post-1990. They have accumulated large numbers of excess
permits — 10.7 billion tons by the time the Kyoto Protocol expires in
2012, according to a European Union study. Potentially these credits,
often called “hot air,” can be sold to other countries. The Copenhagen
Accord appears to allow the spare credits to be carried forward for
sale after 2012. If the EU bought them all to offset emissions between
2013 and 2020, it could achieve even a 30 percent “cut” in emissions
without making any actual domestic cuts at all.
— Carbon offsets.
This is another way in which countries faced with difficult emissions
reduction targets can offset them by investing in projects to cut
someone else’s emissions. Done well, they allow carbon to be kept out
of the atmosphere more cheaply. Done badly, they amount to carbon
fraud, writing off emissions via green energy projects that were going
to happen anyway. According to WWF, the European Union has already
announced plans to make half a billion tons in emissions “cuts” through
offsets in developing countries between 2012 and 2020. Other nations
could triple that figure, it says.
— Airline and shipping fuel.
A notable failure of the Copenhagen Accord is the absence of proposals
to limit growing emissions from international shipping and aircraft,
which do not fall under the umbrella of anyone’s national emissions.
Currently that is another loophole of one to two billion tons a year.
— Forests.
Copenhagen also failed to reach agreement on a plan to allow countries
to claim either cash or carbon emissions credits for changes in
managing forests to retain carbon. Insiders say the talks faltered
because the U.S. and others refused to close a loophole that would
allow countries to claim credits for improving things in one part of
the country — by planting trees, for instance — while not being held to
account for cutting down trees elsewhere within their borders. Unless
fixed, another billion tons could slip through this loophole, says WWF.
Countries could close these loopholes before the final hoped-for
legally binding agreement is signed. Then again, they might not.
So how could leaders fly out of Copenhagen, often in private jets,
claiming success? More particularly why would some seasoned negotiators
shrug their shoulders at the failures and insist that some progress was
made?
There were two kinds of optimism on display in the final hours of the
conference. The first was techno-optimism. Thus U.S. Congressman Edward
Markey, co-author of the Waxman-Markey cap-and-trade bill,
spoke of a coming “technical revolution” in low-carbon energy systems.
“It will be not unlike the telecom revolution,” he said, transforming
energy technology worldwide far faster than predicted. “We will do far
better than our two-degree goal,” he predicted. With several renewable
technologies growing annually by 30 percent, even before the grand
plans for “green jobs” in the U.S. and elsewhere, this may not be
wishful thinking.
Diplomatic optimists, meanwhile, spoke of the progress they have seen
in understanding of climate issues among world leaders. Standing in for
his boss, Ban Ki-moon, UN assistant secretary general Robert Orr cited,
with evident surprise, the leaders’ “meaningful discussion” of the
respective scientific merits of adopting 2 degrees C or 1.5 degrees C
as a warming limit.
Such optimism is not necessarily well-placed. After concluding the
accord, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said: “This is the first
step we are taking towards a green and low-carbon future for the world.
But like all first steps, the steps are difficult.” He would not have
known that almost the same words were used by one of his predecessors,
John Major, after the Kyoto Protocol in 1997.
Even so, having followed climate talks since the Earth Summit in 1992,
I am in many ways amazed at the progress made. It would have been hard
to predict back in Rio that within two decades governments would be
discussing cutting emissions by 50 or even 80 percent by mid-century.
After all, they are talking about dismantling carbon-based energy
systems that have underpinned economies since the industrial
revolution. The trouble is that the science of climate change has
become scarier, too, since 1992, and the threat seems much closer.
For all the travails and disappointment of the last two weeks, it is
still possible to be optimistic that the world is approaching a genuine
tipping point in how we get our energy. Will it come in time to prevent
tipping points in the climate system? Frankly, nobody knows the answer
to that.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Fred Pearce is a freelance author and journalist based in the UK. He is environment consultant for New Scientist magazine and author of the recent books When The Rivers Run Dry and With Speed and Violence. His latest book is Confessions of an Eco-Sinner: Tracking Down the Sources of My Stuff. In earlier articles for Yale Environment 360 Pearce has written about the mishandling of the “Climategate” controversy, and about what he calls humankind’s addiction to nitrogen.
