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Tuesday 15 July 2008
by: Walden Bello, Foreign Policy in Focus
While
drafting the so-called Bali Roadmap during the UN Conference on climate
change last December, delegates faced a painful choice. They could
specifically mention the necessity of reducing greenhouse gas (GHG)
emissions by 25-40% by 2020 and face the possibility of a U.S. walkout
from the negotiations. Or they could drop all mention of targets to
keep Washington in the negotiations - and risk of the United States
fatally obstructing the process of coming up with a tough regime of
mandatory emissions cuts that would have to be in place by the UN's
climate meeting in Copenhagen in December 2009.
The delegates went with the latter and appeased Washington
by not mentioning any targets. After the declaration on climate issued
by the G8 summit a few days ago in Hokkaido, Japan, it is clear that
the delegates in Bali made a strategic mistake. The G8's endorsement of
a 50% reduction in emissions by 2050, which they have presented as a
major step forward, is actually, as the South African government put
it, a "regression from what is required to make a meaningful
contribution to meeting the challenges of climate change."
In fact, "regression" is too polite. The G8 position is a
giant step backward. It may have effectively undermined the prospects
for an effective global climate strategy for the second commitment
period of the Kyoto Protocol that is expected to be finalized at the
crucial UN meeting in Copenhagen in December 2009.
Deconstructing the G8 Position
Given the massive confusion that the G8 climate communique
has created globally, it is worthwhile to deconstruct the position in
detail.
The 25-40% reduction from 1990 emission levels by 2020 that
could have been adopted in Bali grew out of a developing consensus.
Based on the latest report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC), this consensus holds that preventing global mean
temperature from rising above the critical threshold of 2 degrees
centigrade in the 21st century will require radical cuts in greenhouse
gas emissions of 80-90% by 2050. The 25-40% reductions were an
intermediate target on the path to achieving this goal. The G8
"commitment" of about half this final target is grossly inadequate.
Several other considerations highlight the dangers of the
Washington-driven formula First, the G8 proposes a global cut, not one
that would be undertaken only by the industrialized or "Annex One"
countries. As such, big polluters like the United States can actually
free-ride on the rest of the world.
Second, the cut has no clear baseline. When making the
announcement, Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda initially said the
cut was from 1990 levels. Then he had to take back that statement and
subsequently mentioned the higher levels of 2000 as the baseline.
Third, this declaration of intent is not binding, and the
G8 have given no indication that they want to bring their "pledge"
fully under the UN climate negotiations framework that would bind its
signatories. Indeed, the G8 announcement reinforces the G8 as a site
for climate action that rivals the UN process and effectively subverts
it. Not surprisingly, the G8 declaration emerged as part of a parallel
process known as the "Major Economies Meeting." The Major Economies
Meeting is a U.S. initiative to wrest decision-making on climate from
the UN framework and process.
Anti-Climate United Front
The G8 climate communiquÈ demonstrates that not only
Washington but the other powerful economies of the world are opposed to
effective climate action. And without the rich country governments
committing themselves to obligatory radical cuts in carbon dioxide
levels, it will be impossible to convince China, India, and other
rapidly industrializing economies to agree to subject themselves to a
mandatory regime in the near future.
With Washington's posture so retrograde, the policies of
other developed country governments appear in a more positive light.
But this is an illusion. While Washington has been the most visible
obstacle to achieving effective action on climate, the obstructionist
role of the other advanced industrial countries has not been
insignificant. Japan and Canada, for instance, have retreated from
their previous support for a regime of mandatory reductions and saved
Washington from total isolation in the negotiations.
The European Union, while it continues to support a
mandatory regime, does not appear to be willing to support the cuts of
up to 80-90% by 2050 that are necessary to prevent irreversible
large-scale climate change. In terms of its approach to reducing carbon
emissions, the EU, like the United States, has increasingly given a
central role to the corporate-friendly market approach of carbon
trading. On the critical issue of providing the South with assistance
for technology and adaptation, the EU, again like United States,
prefers to channel the relatively little money it has so far been
willing to commit not through institutional mechanisms set up under UN
auspices but through those established by the World Bank, such as the
Bank's Climate Investment Funds. The reason is simple: the North
controls the World Bank.
Most importantly, like the United States and Japan, the
European governments continue to hang on to the position that economic
growth can be "decoupled" from energy use. In other words, they think
they can maintain current European consumption levels and only have to
achieve the more efficient use of energy and replace oil with other
energy sources. Thus, the EU has preferred to lull Europeans with
panaceas. Brussels has championed biofuels, though its enthusiasm has
been dampened somewhat by the increasingly evident negative impact of
biofuels on global agricultural production. It has also increasingly
come out in support of hard energy alternatives, such as mega-dams and
carbon sequestration and storage technology, and has also reopened the
discussion on nuclear energy.
A Painless Transition?
The focus on techno-fixes is not limited to the political
and economic elites of the North but is shared by key members of its
intellectual elite. I'm not talking about people like the Danish
climate skeptic Bjorn Lomborg but influential opinion-makers like
Jeffrey Sachs, who has attempted to transform himself from the author
of economic shock therapy in Eastern Europe to a progressive partisan
of the struggles to end poverty and to fight global warming. In his
latest book Common Wealth, Sachs' message is that technology can make
the transition to a clean Green world a relatively painless one, with
no major lifestyle change in the North and no change in the high-growth
development paradigm in the South. "Rather than focusing, as some
environmentalists do, on reducing the income and consumption of the
rich world," he asserts, "we should focus much more on raising
theÖsustainability of the world's technologies."
For Sachs, the key technology is carbon capture and
sequestration (CCS) "which will allow the world to continue to use low
cost fossil fuels such as coal in a manner that does not wreck the
climate." With what can only be described as childlike
techno-enthusiasm, Sachs says, "air capture would allow humanity to
reverse a previous rise of CO2 by capturing and sequestering more
carbon dioxide than is being emitted in any period! Put differently,
the best that can be achieved at a power plant is to stop new
emissions. With air capture, we could put into reverse what we've done
up to this point." That this technology is at least 20 years away from
being a practical technology and comes with unknown risks does not
enter Sachs' sci-fi scenario.
Capitalism and the Climate Crisis
Herman Daly, the renowned environmentalist, calls this
attitude - that environmental action stops when it begins to impinge on
the economy - "growthmania." Growthmania, however, goes beyond being a
psychological fix. It is a cultivated ideological predisposition that
serves as a protective shield for global capitalism. Capitalism is an
expansive mode of production, and it can only reproduce itself by
continually transforming living nature into dead commodities. This is
essentially what growth is all about. This is why ever-increasing
consumption is so central to the engine of profitability that drives
capitalism.
The G8 - the directorate of global capitalism - is trying
hard to avoid just such radical controls on growth, consumption,
profits, and the market that a viable strategy to stave off the looming
climate catastrophe will necessitate. Voluntary cuts, technofixes, and
carbon trading are desperate efforts to prevent the inevitable. Just
like the U.S. economy during World War II, it will take planned
economies with severely regulated markets and profits, strictly
controlled consumption, and equitably shared sacrifice to win the war
against climate change.
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A columnist for Foreign Policy In Focus (www.fpif.org),
Walden Bello is also senior analyst at the Bangkok-based research and
advocacy institute Focus on the Global South and professor of sociology
at the University of the Philippines.
(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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