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[Biofuel] Aftermath of Copenhagen

Keith Addison
Thu, 24 Dec 2009 01:11:58 -0800

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/eo20091224gd.html

Thursday, Dec. 24, 2009

Aftermath of Copenhagen

By GWYNNE DYER

"The city of Copenhagen is a crime scene tonight, with the guilty men 
and women fleeing to the airport," said John Sauven, executive 
director of Greenpeace UK, on Friday night. "There are no targets for 
carbon cuts and no agreement on a legally binding treaty."

The guilty men included U.S. President Barack Obama and Brazilian 
President Luiz Inacio "Lula" da Silva, who took the first planes out. 
Xie Zhenhua, the head of China's delegation, lingered behind to 
declare that "the meeting has had a positive result, everyone should 
be happy." But many people are unhappy, including most of the 130 
presidents and prime ministers who showed up for the Copenhagen 
conference.

Their countries spent two weeks struggling unsuccessfully to bridge 
the gulf between the rich and the poor nations over who pays to fix 
the eminently fixable problem of global warming, but at least they 
were clear on the goal. They wanted a treaty that would hold the 
warming to a safe level (although they could not agree on what that 
level was). Most of them even wanted to make it legally enforceable.

The "Copenhagen Accord," by contrast, was a drive-by shooting, agreed 
in a few hours between the United States, China, Brazil, India and 
South Africa. It contains no hard numbers for emissions cuts and no 
deadlines. Yet Obama insisted that it was a "meaningful result," 
because they had "agreed to set a mitigation target to limit warming 
to no more than 2 degrees C and, importantly, to take action to meet 
this objective."

It's easy to make fun of this stuff. Those wise and powerful men set 
a target of no more than 2 C of warming - which is exactly the same 
target they declared at the G8/G20 summit last July. "Importantly," 
they also agreed "to take action to meet this objective" - though 
they could not agree on what the action would be, or when they would 
decide on it.

For this, 192 countries spent two weeks negotiating at Copenhagen? 
Why bother? It was an utter waste of time. But why is anybody 
surprised? Even I knew that it was bound to end up like that.

Two weeks ago, I wrote: "The Copenhagen summit will certainly fail to 
deliver the right deal. The danger is that it will lock us into the 
wrong deal, and leave no political space for countries to go back and 
try to get it right later. Public opinion is climbing a steep 
learning curve, and the asymmetrical deal that cannot be sold 
politically today might be quite salable in as little as a year or 
two."

Well, Copenhagen certainly didn't lock us into the wrong deal. The 
reason no deal was possible is that public opinion in the developed 
countries is still in denial about the fact that the final climate 
deal must be asymmetrical. Until the general public grasps that, 
especially in the United States, there will be no real progress.

Most Western leaders understand the history. For two centuries, the 
countries that are now "developed" got rich by burning fossil fuels. 
In the process they filled the atmosphere with their greenhouse gas 
emissions, to the point where it now has little remaining capacity to 
absorb carbon dioxide without tipping us into disastrous heating.

This means that the rapidly developing countries like China, India 
and Brazil will push the whole world into runaway warming if they 
follow the same historical path in growing their economies. Since 
they are relatively poor, however, they have been investing mainly in 
fossil fuels, just as the West did when it was starting to 
industrialize. A wide variety of alternatives is now available, but 
only at a higher price.

So how do we deal with this unfair history? The developed countries 
must cut their emissions deeply and fast, and give the developing 
countries enough money to cover the extra cost of growing their 
economies with the clean sources of energy that they must use instead 
of fossil fuels. That's the deal, but most voters in the United 
States don't understand it yet.

That's why Obama couldn't promise to cut American emissions to 20 or 
25 percent below 1990 levels by 2020, as most other industrial 
countries were offering to do. Instead, he could only offer a paltry 
4 percent - and he couldn't even guarantee that.

His most visible problem is the U.S. Senate, a body whose 
constitutional role is to delay change. The Senate has become more 
corrupt in recent decades because of the almost unlimited spending 
power of special interest groups, but an uncorrupted Senate would not 
pass drastic climate legislation either. Like Obama himself, it 
cannot risk getting too far ahead of the American public.

Until Americans start to take climate change seriously, Obama will 
not be able to move. It is politically impossible for the Chinese to 
make concrete commitments until the Americans do. We will just have 
to wait until they get there.

Each year in which we don't reach an adequate global climate deal is 
probably costing on the order of 50 million extra premature deaths 
between now and the end of the century, but that's just the current 
tariff. By 2015 the annual cost in lives of further delay will be 
going up steeply. Time is not on our side.

Gwynne Dyer is a London-based independent journalist whose articles 
are published in 45 countries.




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