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By Nicholas Stern
The Guardian UK
Friday 30 November 2007
A fair and global effort to tackle climate change needs wealthy states to take the lead in CO2 cuts.
The
Bali summit on climate change, which starts next week, will seek to lay
the foundations for a new global agreement on reducing the greenhouse
gas emissions that cause rising temperatures and climate change.
Ambitious targets for emission reduction must be at the heart of that
agreement, together with effective market mechanisms that encourage
emission trading between countries, rich and poor. The problem of
climate change involves a fundamental failure of markets: those who
damage others by emitting greenhouse gases generally do not pay.
Climate change is a result of the greatest market failure the world has
seen.
The
evidence on the seriousness of the risks from inaction is now
overwhelming. We risk damage on a scale larger than the two world wars
of the past century. The problem is global and the response must be
collaboration on a global scale. The rich countries must lead the way
in taking action. And in thinking about global action to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions, we must invoke three basic criteria.
The
first is effectiveness: the scale of the response must be commensurate
with the challenge. This means setting a target for emission reduction
that can keep the risks at acceptable levels.
The
overall targets of 50% reductions in emissions by 2050 (relative to
1990) agreed at the G8 summit in Heiligendamm last June are essential
if we are to have a reasonable chance of keeping temperature increases
below 2C or 3C. While these targets involve strong action, they are not
overambitious relative to the risk of failing to achieve them.
The
second criterion is efficiency: we must keep down the costs of emission
reduction, using prices or taxes wherever possible. Emission trading
between countries must be a central part of the story. And helping poor
countries cover their costs of emission reduction gives them an
incentive to join a global deal.
Third,
we should be concerned about equity. Our starting point is deeply
inequitable with poor countries certain to be hit earliest and hardest
by climate change. But rich countries are responsible for the bulk of
past emissions: US emissions are currently more than 20 tonnes of CO2
equivalent per annum, Europe's are 10-15 tonnes, China's five or more
tonnes, India's around one tonne, and most of Africa much less than
one.
For
a 50% reduction in global emissions by 2050, the world average per
capita must drop from seven tonnes to two or three. Within these global
targets, even a minimal view of equity demands that the rich countries'
reductions should be at least 80% - either made directly or purchased.
An 80% target for rich countries would bring equality of only the flow
of current emissions - around the two to three tonnes per capita level.
In fact, they will have consumed the big majority of the available
space in the atmosphere.
Rich
countries also need to provide funding for three more key elements of a
global deal. First, there should be an international programme to
combat deforestation, which contributes 15-20% of emissions. For
$10bn-$15bn per year, half the deforestation could be stopped.
Second,
there needs to be promotion of rapid technological advance to mitigate
the effects of climate change. The development of technologies must be
accelerated and methods found to promote their sharing. Carbon capture
and storage for coal (CCS) is particularly urgent since coal-fired
electric power is currently the dominant technology around the world,
and emerging nations will be investing heavily in these technologies.
For $5bn a year, it should be possible to create 30 commercial-scale
coal-fired CCS stations within seven or eight years.
Finally,
rich countries should honour their commitment to 0.7% of GDP in aid by
2015. This would yield increases in flows of $150bn-$200bn per year.
The extra costs that developing countries face as a result of climate
change are likely to be upwards of $80bn a year, and it is vital that
extra resources are available. This proposed programme of action can be
built if rich countries take a lead in Bali on their targets, the
promotion of trading mechanisms and funding for deforestation and
technology. With leadership and the right incentives, developing
countries will join.
The
building of the deal, and its enforcement, will come from the willing
participation of countries driven by the understanding that action is
vital. It will not be a wait-and-see game as in World Trade
Organisation talks, where nothing is done until everything is settled.
The
necessary commitments are increasingly being demonstrated by political
action and elections around the world. A clear idea of where we are
going as a world will make action at the individual, community and
country level much easier and more coherent.
These
commitments must, of course, be translated into action. There is a
solution in our hands. It will not be easy to build. But the
alternative is too destructive to accept. Bali is an opportunity to
draw the outline of a common understanding, which will both guide
action now and build towards the deal.
Sir
Nicholas Stern led the Stern Review on climate change; today in London
he is giving the Royal Economic Society public lecture on Climate
Change, Ethics and the Economics of the Global Deal.
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. h o t g l o b e has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is h o t g l o b e endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
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