On 12 December 2015, after 13 days of intense negotiations,
the world’s leaders emerged from the depths of Paris’s basement meeting rooms
to triumphantly declare that they had done it.
They had signed “a deal to save the world”! Francois Hollande puffed out his chest and
proclaimed that, “history is here”, while Barack Obama stressed the importance
of securing agreement on such an “urgent and potentially irreversible” issue.
But behind all the hyperbole and media fawning, what has the
UN Framework Convention on Climate Change actually agreed in the newly adopted
Paris Agreement and how effective could it be at curbing climate change?
Well, to properly judge the Paris
Agreement, I think we have to start by revisiting its grandfather: the
Kyoto Protocol.
Background
(Disclaimer: this is based on my research on climate change negotiations
since 2009)
The Kyoto Protocol was signed in 1997 to limit global
greenhouse gas concentrations to a level “that would prevent dangerous
anthropogenic interference with the climate system”. Posturing aside, this meant that the 83 signatories
were committing to prevent the world’s atmospheric concentration of greenhouse
gases from exceeding 450 parts per million (ppm). In turn, this boiled down to a commitment by the
developed countries to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions by 8% by 2012 and
20% by 2020 (all the figures were calculated using 1990 as the base
level). However, research indicated that
450 ppm would still represent up to a 78% risk of exceeding a 2°C rise in global temperatures – the
threshold at which there was a scientific consensus that things would get
pretty bad.
Consequently, Kyoto was roundly denounced as a watered-down
version of what would be needed to genuinely address the wider threats posed by
climate change. The failure to get the
US, China and India to bind themselves to any legally required emissions
reduction targets greatly diminished its efficacy. Infamously, the U.S. and Australia signed Kyoto
but never ratified it (meaning, it never became domestic law so the countries’
citizens couldn’t force their governments to keep their international promises).
Nevertheless, Kyoto must be viewed historically as an essential
first step that endorsed the scientific consensus and solidified the sense of collective
responsibility that surrounded climate change (lest we forget how large and
vocal the climate change sceptics and deniers were).
The reason the history books will record Kyoto as a failure
is primarily due to external influences, as the first commitment period,
2008-2012, was derailed by the global financial crisis. A clear focus on economic recovery led to an
almost ubiquitous failure to meet national emissions reduction targets that then dampened
the enthusiasm of subsequent efforts and talks.
In 2009, the Copenhagen climate summit ended in a deadlock. In 2010, the Cancun summit could only secure
a collection of voluntary pledges. As the
world’s economy was crashing, so were countries’ desires to curtail their
emissions (especially if they could gain short-term profit from emissions
intensive industries). In 2011, Canada
withdrew its agreement to Kyoto as reports found greenhouse gas emissions were
20% above the 1990 baseline. Canada’s
economy was flagging and the tar sands, an extremely emissions intensive form
of energy, represented a tremendously plentiful natural resource that the
nation could call upon to boost their economy.
Promises regarding the environment be damned.
Public confidence and commitment to Kyoto took a further
nosedive in 2012. By May 2012, Japan,
Russia, Canada and the US had all stated that they did not plan to sign up to
the second commitment period (2013-2020).
Attempts were made to resuscitate Kyoto by extending the first
commitment period through 2015, and though the move was successful, momentum had
seriously waned and a new agreement, reflecting the reality of a greatly
changed global economy, was badly needed.
So, what were the issues holding things up?
Originally, the most contentious points had always been
around “burden sharing”. Addressing
climate change is primarily about investing in renewable energy and energy
efficiency. But that doesn’t come
cheap. Developed countries had to face
two stark realities. Firstly, developed
countries have been responsible for almost all of the greenhouse gas emissions to
date. Secondly, developed countries have
a greater ability to pay for climate change mitigation and adaptation efforts. Consequently, it has consistently been argued
by the developing countries that the EU and US should shoulder the vast
majority of the financial burden (this became known as the doctrine of “common
but differentiated responsibility”).
This doctrine was largely reflected in Kyoto. The EU and US accepted their increased
responsibility and paid disproportionately more than the likes of China and
India.
However, small movements in proportional responsibility
caused disproportionate tension due to the stagnation of the global economy (rather
than any vehement ideological disagreement, as had sometimes been reported in
the media). A percentage point here or
there meant millions, if not billions, in spending increases, imports or
exports. Given the contractionary fiscal
policy that almost every government in the world implemented in 2008, the
benevolence required to fix a global problem in a competitive world became
alarmingly (but understandably) sparse.
The tide began to turn in 2014 when both developed and
developing countries were coming out of economic hibernation. The unlikely
allies of the US and China set the stage for more fruitful talks when
Presidents Obama and Xi Jinping signed a joint pledge. The pledge stated that the US would cut
greenhouse gas emissions by 26-28% below 2005 levels by 2025, and China would increase
its non-fossil fuel share of all energy to around 20% by 2030. Given that these heavyweights had shaken
hands before getting in the ring, the Paris talks appeared much more optimistic.
Consequently, when talks began in Paris on 30 November 2015,
debate had moved away from the issue of who should pay and onto the issues of
how to pay and how to verify that countries were using the funds properly.
Momentum had well and truly shifted once the “High Ambition
Coalition” was formed. Consisting of the
EU, the US, Canada, Brazil and the vast majority of island nations (who stand
to suffer the worst effects of climate change), the High Ambition Coalition
pushed for reform on four key issues. They
wanted the Paris Agreement to:
1.
be legally binding,
2.
set a clear, long-term goal on climate change
that is in line with scientific advice,
3.
introduce a mechanism for reviewing countries’
emissions commitments every five years, and
4.
create a unified system for tracking countries’
progress on meeting their carbon goals.
Nonetheless, India and China still represented formidable
opposition as they, justifiably, banded together to resist any overly
burdensome restraints on the economic expansion of developing countries.
The Paris Agreement
So with that bit of rough and ready context, I want to take
a look at some of the more important articles in the Agreement to consider
where the balance was struck and whether we’re approaching a fair, effective
and enforceable global plan that can combat climate change.
Article 2 – The
Overall Target
Article 2 reflects the entire Agreement in a microcosm. Article 2 is a marked improvement in ambition
and understanding, as compared to its Kyoto predecessor, but is also a sad
indictment of how progress has floundered in the last decade.
The new wording states that the Agreement aims to strengthen
the global response to the threat of climate change by:
“holding the increase in the global average temperature to well below 2°C
above pre-industrial levels and to pursue efforts to limit the temperature
increase to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels…in a manner that does not
threaten food production”.
Firstly, we can
immediately see that there is a clear emphasis on the temperature here, where
the Kyoto wording used a more vague reference to “dangerous
anthropogenic interference with the climate system” and concentrations of
greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. Limiting
the atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases does address the problem,
but it is a prescriptive method to drafting (theoretically, the atmospheric
concentration of greenhouse gases could be very high and the temperature
needn’t rise, e.g. spraying the atmosphere with sulphur could reflect the sun’s
heat and cool the planet). However, by referencing temperature, the
drafting links more directly to the desired outcome. Consequently, the Agreement is clearer, the
application is wider and its message is much more resonant and easy to
communicate.
Secondly, the pursuit
of 1.5°C is a drafting achievement to be celebrated. Few spectators thought such an ambitious
target would be included. Its inclusion
reflects a global consensus about the severity of the problem and a foothold
for future talks.
However, you don’t
need to be a legal scholar to see that it is the 2°C target that will be
legally enforceable, while the 1.5°C target is merely aspirational and
therefore holds no real value beyond window-dressing and political
point-scoring.
Consequently, we’ve
moved from a “2°C” benchmark to a “well below 2°C” benchmark. Another step in the right direction, but such
ambiguous language provides next to no ability to enforce the increased
ambition. The world is already 1°C
warmer than pre-Industrial levels and limiting climate change to “well below”
2°C will require that global carbon-dioxide emissions peak well before 2030. That would represent a rate of
“decarbonisation” (a word not found in the Agreement, thanks to the
sensitivities of Saudi Arabia) far greater than the world has yet seen. 2°C
remains the high water mark that signals catastrophic consequences: billions in
mitigation and millions in refugees.
Thirdly, the
addition of the “food production” caveat is a sensible addition. In the early 2000s the US began repurposing
corn in order to produce ethanol / biofuel (which has slightly lower emissions
than regular petroleum gasoline). The
problem being that producing ethanol takes disproportionately large amounts of
corn and the US produces approximately 40% of the world’s corn. Consequently, the global supply of corn as a
food source (for both humans and livestock) plummeted, prices soared and the world’s
poorest and hungriest people were unable to afford this very basic ingredient. The Agreement now guards against such
cannibalistic approaches. Climate change
initiatives are redundant if they lead to hunger or deprivation.
Lastly, Article 2
restates the irrefutable (but hopefully not permanent) position between
developed and developing countries’ responsibilities:
“The Agreement will be implemented
to reflect equity and the principle of common but differentiated
responsibilities and respective capabilities, in the light of different
national circumstances.”
Article 4 – Target
Setting
Article 4 contains the meat of the actual plan. How are we to reach the Article 2 objective?
“Parties aim to reach global peaking of greenhouse gas emissions as soon
as possible, recognising that peaking will take longer for developing country
Parties…so as to achieve a balance between anthropogenic emissions by sources
and removals by sinks…in the second half of this century.”
This is a stark contrast to Kyoto. At first glance, I thought this article was
disappointingly full of loose language and escapable commitments. However, the more I consider it, the more I
believe it to be a wise reaction to how Kyoto played out, and a continued
recognition of humanitarian objectives in the developing world.
Firstly, in comparison to Kyoto, target setting has moved
from being a centralised process to being decentralised. Where Kyoto mandated static targets for each
country, Paris essentially takes a very ‘hands off’ approach, in which each
country sets its own targets, with almost absolute discretion, in accordance
with its own unique set of circumstances.
Whether this is overly optimistic and naïve or necessarily
non-prescriptive is an important question. In my opinion, this is a necessary reaction to
the global financial crisis and Kyoto fallout.
Climate change agendas cannot be imposed from the top down. Economies and governments need flexibility. We saw that the rigidity of the
internationally set Kyoto emissions reduction targets simply
meant that, whenever things got difficult, parties just jumped ship. Consequently, what we have now is a much
looser framework, but a much clearer vision.
Secondly, developing countries should be afforded greater
leniency in terms of emissions. In a
perfect world we could demand that no more dirty infrastructure be built. In developed countries we see the lack of
energy infrastructure as the perfect environment for a clean energy
infrastructure. The reality is that the
developing world has billions of people living in poverty. An overly prescriptive approach would fail to
respect the suffering of those in need right here, right now. The developed world improved living standards
using fossil fuels, to deny the developing world the same opportunity would be
hypocritical.
So what is it that each country must do?
Each country must:
- set national targets regarding absolute emissions reductions, financial contributions and mitigation efforts;
- monitor and report on the achievement of those targets in line with the new rules regarding transparency and accounting; and
- meet at least every five years to revise the targets upwards.
Article 9 – Finance
“Developed countries Parties shall provide financial resources to assist
developing country Parties with respect to both mitigation and adaptation in
continuation with their existing obligations…Other Parties are encouraged to
provide or continue such support voluntarily.”
In practice, this requires $100 billion per year to flow from
developed countries to developing countries by 2020, with the sum to be
revisited in 2025. This is amounts to
maintenance of the status quo, which is disappointing. However, unlike Kyoto, this is a minimum
amount, building in flexibility for greater contributions as economic
conditions improve.
Unfortunately there is still blind treatment of rich but
still developing countries such as Bahrain, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Singapore and
South Korea, etc. To enforce identical
financial obligations on all developing economies is as patently ludicrous as
saying that sub-Saharan Africa is the same as China. I recognise that politically it was always
going to be tough to get those nations to sign up to more binding financial
commitments, but this represents a failure to secure commitment from some of
the world’s leading emerging economies.
Article 14 –
Stocktaking
If Paris is to be a long-term success, article 14 contains
the vital mechanism to ensure collective vigilance. Article 14 mandates that all countries must
come together to perform a “global stocktake” every five years, in which, the
signatories will assess the overall progress towards achieving the purpose of
the Agreement and its long-term goals. The
first such global stocktake will be in 2023.
However, these stocktakes will not be merely procedural
matters, India has already spoken out about its fears that the concession that
developed countries will be allowed to peak their greenhouse gas emissions
sooner than developing countries, implies that developed countries will be
allowed to grab a disproportionate amount of the global carbon space at the
first stocktake, thus inhibiting economic development via fossil fuel means. Consequently, the process is threatening to
become extremely politicised. Rumours
persist that India will make a unilateral declaration of its requirements for carbon space prior to the first meeting, threatening the legitimacy of a global
carbon budget before its even begun.
Article [x] -
Liability and Compensation
One thing that was explicitly excluded from the Agreement,
was the issue of compensation for countries adversely effected by climate
change. The small Island Nations pushed
hard but ultimately failed to include a deal in which historical emitters would
be liable for future compensation claims (e.g. for destruction of property,
loss of profits, etc.) where climate change could be proven to be the primary
cause.
As wholesome as this would have been for the Island Nations
that are rightly terrified about what climate change may do their economies and
people, this was always going to be a huge stretch. The historical emitters have already accepted
the lion’s share of paying for the mitigation effort. Setting a precedent that these countries would
be liable to pay compensation claims for damage caused by climate change, would
be tantamount to writing a blank cheque.
Article 9 goes some way towards covering the expenses that Island
Nations will face; time will tell if that amount is sufficient, however, damages may
very well equate to double compensation.
Furthermore, the Agreement contains several carve outs for the Island Nations
that reduce their obligations and liabilities.
Conclusion
I think by now you’re sensing that I’ve seen a lot of good
and a fair amount of bad in the Paris Agreement. Consequently, I’ll summarise by laying it out
my personal views:
Wins:
- 196 countries have agreed to this draft deal. While the deal is not to be signed until 22 April 2016, this represents more than 100 new signatories as compared to Kyoto. Importantly, it has re-engaged the world’s large defectors: the US, Canada, Australia, Russia, China and India.
- The drafting has improved and expresses a clearer vision of how to combat climate change and the urgency with which it must be done.
- A clear response to Kyoto’s failures. By empowering countries to set and monitor their own targets, the Agreement is a lot more flexible, which should improve commitment.
Losses:
- With increased flexibility comes limited legal enforceability. Consequently, the deal hinges greatly on trust between nations.
- A failure to secure financial obligations from the rich developing countries.
- Countries can still walk away if it gets too difficult, as Article 28 allows for countries to withdraw three years after signing.
I wrote my law school thesis on whether the Kyoto Protocol
provided an adequate basis from which modern economies could begin to
transition to a low-carbon economy. I
wasn’t satisfied then and I’m not satisfied now. However, the Paris Agreement represents a
tremendous step forward from the Kyoto Protocol. The reality is that economic compromises must
be made in order to address climate change.
In an über-competitive
world that will always be an exercise in brinksmanship, pushed by those with
the strongest economies, the greatest domestic political will or those in
danger of suffering from the worst consequences; and dragged by those whose
economies need fossil fuels or whose political climate does not afford long
term planning. Consequently, I am
pleased that the Agreement reflects that the climate change agenda exists
within a multifaceted political and economic world but also that we must watch
each other in order to make the necessary changes.
What we’ve ended up with is an agreement that has rightly or
wrongly devolved the power of the UN and trusted that, given that right
economic and political conditions, every country will find it in their own
self-interest to move to a low-carbon economy.
I believe that is sound reasoning.
Whether that reasoning will become reality before we hit 2°C, is a gamble the world’s leaders have
just bet the house on.
No comments:
Post a Comment