Dec 20

The UN climate change talks in Copenhagen ended in a dramatic flurry of activity, diplomacy, and negotiation early Saturday.  The activity, however, did not translate into any significant momentum towards resolving the major impediments to a truly global response to the climate crisis.

The main takeaway from the talks was the “Copenhagen Accord,” [.pdf] a document largely negotiated by the large emitters, including the United States, China, India and Brazil.  The details of how the accord was negotiated are still sketchy, although some the initial reporting suggests that world leaders were actually going line-by-line through the text–an activity normally reserved for lower level diplomats.  Interestingly, it seemed as if China & India were savvy in keeping the EU and the US at bay.  Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao sent his underlings into meetings with Western leaders and apparently rejected both the EU offer of reducing its emissions by 30% by 2020 from 1990 levels and the general developed country commitment of an 80% reduction by 2050 under the questionable guise that by 2050 they will be considered “developed” and subject to reductions.

After the accord was endorsed late Friday night by the few countries engaged in its drafting, it needed to be presented to the larger “conference of the parties” to the UN climate treaty.  The floor debate began around 3:00am and was quite rancorous.  There was significant opposition from Latin American countries and small island nations who were cut out of the accord’s drafting.

Decisions under the climate treaty generally require consensus from all participating countries and at one point it seemed as if the conference would break up without considering the accord.  Apparently the head UK climate negotiator, Ed Miliband stepped in to defend the accord and the conference wound up “noting” the accord as opposed to “supporting” or “endorsing” it.

Such a tepid response sullies the accord’s significance within the context of the UN decision making framework.

So, what does the Copenhagen Accord say?

First, it is a political agreement, so there are no legal obligations on the part of signatories to follow its directives.

Second, the accord does say that “the increase in global temperature should be below 2 degrees Celsius.”  This is in keeping with other political proclamations over the past year by developed countries–in particular the G8.  However the use of the word “should”–rather than “shall”–doesn’t imply a significant level of commitment.

Third, instead of a timetable for a globally-binding treaty, the accord simply says that “we should cooperate in achieving the peaking of global and national emissions as soon as possible.”  Again, no “shall,” and more significantly, no mention in the accord of translating its framework into a legally-binding treaty–an outcome of Copenhagen that was hoped for by many before the talks began.

Fourthly, the accord asks both developed and developing countries to submit their own national emissions targets by 31 January 2010 to include in the accord.  Significantly, developing countries’ mitigation targets “will be subject to their domestic measurement, reporting, and verification” procedures.  This represents a strike against the US position, which had insisted throughout the talks that China and India–in particular–needed to be subject to international “MRV” procedures.  The accord does say, however, that if a developing country is receiving international financing for a specific mitigation action then that particular action needs to be subject to international monitoring.

Fifth, the accord does recognize the importance of forest conservation and endorses an “immediate establishment of a mechanism” to provide financing for stopping deforestation.

Sixth, the accord provides specific numbers for financing from developed countries to developing countries to deal with adaptation and mitigation.  The commitment is collective–meaning the specific breakdown of each country’s share has not been established–and will be $30 billion for three years.  By 2020, the number should rise to $100 billion per year.  These aggregate numbers are lower than amounts discussed before the conference and the specific mechanisms on how money will be allocated are unresolved.

The accord discusses setting up a “Copenhagen Green Climate Fund” that will monitor climate aid and should be accountable to the parties to the UN convention.  Although I’m not a lawyer, it is not clear to me what the significance of the parties’ lack of clear endorsement of the Copenhagen Accord might have on the governance of this fund.

Finally, the accord calls for its implementation to be completed by 2015 and a future “consideration of strengthening of the long-term goal referencing various matters presented by the science, including in relation to temperature rises of 1.5 degrees Celsius.”  This, obviously, was a rather torpid attempt to placate small island states and the growing body of scientists and activists who argue that the risks of accepting a 2 degree rise in global temperature are too great.

The summation of the Copenhagen Accord has been best expressed by Kim Carstensen of the World Wildlife Fund, who calls it “half-baked and unclear.”

It doesn’t really resolve anything, but brings up even more questions about how the problem of global climate change can be addressed.

Some of these questions include:  If the signatories to the declaration really want to keep the planet from warming 2 degrees, what are they going to do to see that goal realized? What will happen if/when, at the end of January after countries present their mitigation goals, it becomes apparent that the voluntary commitments will be insufficient to stave off harmful global warming?

The accord says that it should be fully implemented by 2015.  This is also the year that IPCC head Rajendra Pachauri said that global emissions need to peak in order to stay within the 2 degree warming threshold.  How can can emissions peak by 2015 given the leisurely timeline for implementation?

What is the future of the UN climate change convention?  If the Copenhagen Accord is the product of a backroom deal that fundamentally eclipses the Kyoto Protocol and the larger UNFCCC process, does this mean that the effort for a legally binding treaty is effectively over?  Regardless of what happens to the UNFCCC, how can differences in the US, EU, China and Indian positions be resolved if we are to live on a planet safe from the risks associated with escalated global temperatures?

Is the financing adequate to help the most distressed peoples of the world avoid catastrophe?  The numbers in the accord don’t seem to add up and are not nearly ambitious enough to deal with the crises many less developed countries are experiencing right now in their struggles to adapt to changing climatic conditions.

These questions were the ones that were supposed to have been resolved at Copenhagen.  The fact that nothing has been resolved is testament to a failure in leadership of many countries involved and especially those who pushed through the accord, namely the US, China, and India.

The next few weeks will be crucial.  Pressure from civil society on national leaders will be essential if actual progress can be made on mitigation.  If the numbers presented on 1 February don’t hold up to scrutiny, each of the signatories needs to be quite explicit on how the international community will actually address the reality of the science.

That leaves the last unresolved question which comes out Copenhagen, namely the future of civil society in pushing for a fair, binding, and ambitious deal.  The UNFCCC and Danish government’s failure to adequately accommodate civil society in Copenhagen leaves a bitter taste for many who had hopes for the talks.  Expelling civil society observers from the Bella Center for the last days of the conference undoubtedly made it easier for the major emitters to push through a “half-baked” accord.  It will be difficult, but the many civil society groups involved in climate policy will have to regroup and redouble their efforts to pressure national leaders to develop an actual deal.

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Dec 18

Barack Obama gave a pretty stern speech to other leaders at the UN climate summit in Copenhagen a few minutes ago.

Unfortunately, he yielded no ground that would make a fair, ambitious, and binding deal forthcoming from the deliberations over the last two weeks.

The main sticking point for Obama is Chinese resistance to agree to any specific cuts that will be verifiable to an international body.

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao preceded Obama and basically said that China will make cuts from business as usual, and that they should be taken at their word.

President Lula de Silva of Brazil was sandwiched in between Obama and Wen and was quite impassioned in expressing frustration about the little progress seen thus far.  As a way to show constructive action, Lula even indicated that Brazil would provide financial assistance to low income countries to develop in a low-carbon manner–a move unprecedented given Brazil’s position as a developing country itself.

These early speeches continue to dim the hope that anything substantive will come out of the negotiations

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Dec 18

As world leaders poured into Copenhagen, negotiations continued Thursday in an effort to salvage some type of agreement from the UN-sponsored climate talks.

No new negotiating drafts were officially released, although a leaked document from the UN Secretariat has been circulating amongst NGO observers suggests the current policies on the table will only limit global warming to 3 degrees centigrade from pre-industrial levels.

This, obviously, means that much more work needs to be done if the pledge by developed countries to limit global warming to 2 degrees is to be realized.

Given the non-public manner of the negotiations–nearly all NGO observers have been kicked out of the conference venue–it is difficult to ascertain precisely how the negotiations are developing.

Some countries, however, are beginning to show their cards on key issues. Most notably, yesterday, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton pledged that her country would contribute to the $100 billion/year aid fund for developing countries that was first introduced by Gordon Brown earlier this year.

Key issues about the actual amount each developing country should contribute and how the funds will be distributed remain unresolved.

Aside from the financing pledge, very little else was revealed yesterday. This is highly problematic since the consensus of observers suggests that something will have to be produced from these meetings given the fact that over 100 heads of state are now at the negotiations. Simply in order for world leaders to save face, some document will be produced. The real problem is that any document or agreement at this point is not likely to seriously address the pressing policy issues at hand.

The New York Times is reporting that upon arriving in Copenhagen, Obama immediately went into a closed door meeting with the leaders of major economies instead of giving his planned public address to all delegates. It will be interesting to see what comes out of this meeting and how–in particular–the smallest, poorest nations that are likely excluded from the backdoor meeting react. Nations like Tuvalu have been steadfast in pushing for transparency and a strong deal. If a weak deal emerges from behind closed doors, I would expect Tuvalu and other small island nations to continue their vigorous objections.

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Dec 16

Negotiators in a key sub-group of the UN climate negotiations in Copenhagen worked through the early morning today which culminated in the release of a draft text that is supposed to serve as the basis of an agreement for world leaders to sign when they arrive here on Friday.

As the iteration which appeared on Saturday, the latest text makes little progress on key issues of mitigation for developed and developing countries while saying little about financing schemes for developing countries to adapt to climate change and shift to low-carbon technologies .

The consequence is that the high-level ministers will now have to get involved in the heavy lifting aspect of the negotiating process if any sort of agreement is to be signed by world leaders on Friday.

In other developments, Senator John Kerry addressed the conference in what amounted to a campaign speech for the US position.  My impression has been that Kerry has a lot of respect amongst delegates for his long-standing interest in the climate change issue.  However, his speech was a bit troubling for the negotiations.

He spent quite a bit of time dispelling climate skeptics–which was clearly geared towards domestic consumption.  When you’ve been at a climate change conference in Europe for over a week, it is pretty easy to forget that skeptics actually exist!  His impassioned plea for following the science wasn’t really needed inside the COP, so what it told me is that his Senate bill must be in at least a little trouble–although he equally forcefully said at the end of his speech that the US would pass climate legislation by the end of next year, with the Senate taking up the issue in the spring.

I would have to concur with Tan Copsey at China Dialogue, that the most troubling part of his speech were lightly veiled attacks at the Chinese position in the talks.  He expressed a bit of protectionism by talking about “dumping high carbon” products into the US market.  Additionally, he focused heavily on the idea that countries must have “measurable, reportable, and verifiable” emissions targets.

This is another swipe at China.   The US seems quite skeptical about China’s recent pronouncements that they will reduce their emissions from business-as-usual projections and want to have some assurance that emissions mitigation can be quantified.  China, of course, is hesitant to commit to reductions in the first place and wants to maintain as much flexibility as possible in the negotiations.

Thus with Kerry’s rather hard line speech and the minimal movement on the negotiating text, the only thing clear about the next couple of days is that they will be unpredictable and probably contentious.

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Dec 16

Prime Ministers, Presidents, and other leaders descended on Copenhagen’s Bella Center today to try and develop some sort of agreement as part of the UN-sponsored climate talks.

The high-level segment, however, began at the expense of the “low-level” delegates. Yesterday, despite knowing for months that upwards of 35,000 delegates were registered to attend the negotiations, the UN climate change secretariat instituted a reduced-access policy for NGO delegates. Most NGOs received one third of their original allocations for Tuesday and Wednesday, with NGOs essentially shut out of the conference for the final two days. People generally understand the enhanced security measures needed for when heads of state arrive, but the restrictions were the culmination of a week of rather poorly-organized logistics. Our group arrived on December 6th and had a relatively painless experience getting accredited. However, on Monday–before the restrictions were introduced–new registrants had to wait hours before getting their badges.

Although the reduced allocation seemed to function on Tuesday, for some reason the secretariat shut out ALL NGOs from entering the building beginning around noon. This was preceded by a selective “deactivation” of NGO badges from the environmental groups Avaaz and Friends of the Earth. This is really significant–not only because it is unjust to de-accredit specific groups and that the text of the treaty that serves as the basis of the talks specifically “encourage[s] the widest participation in this process,” but also because civil society groups tend to act as a supportive voice for many of the smaller countries.

Many small countries can’t afford to bring a huge staff and rely on NGOs to monitor action, manage media access, and explain their positions to the greater global public. Youth activists, especially, coordinate rapid response actions in the hall so all participants remember the justice issues at stake in the negotiations. When these groups are arbitrarily excluded from the process, time and resources are spent assailing the process instead of being used to help push for substantive measures to be included in a deal.

The culmination of these decisions is not pretty. After the UN restricted NGO access, activists and others marched to the Bella Center where they were met with police violence, which was filmed by CYDCopenhagen:

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Dec 15

Last Friday, Finland and the European Union hosted a side event at the United Nations climate talks on the building sector.  Finnish Minister of Housing, Jan Vapaavuori was a featured speaker and he made the point that globally, 40% of all energy is used by buildings and that their greenhouse gas emissions account for 30% of total GHGs.  He made the important point that–for developed countries, at least–the crucial issue is dealing with old buildings.

Photo of Jan Vapaavuori: Megapolis 2024

Photo of Jan Vapaavuori: Megapolis 2024

Vapaavuori’s fellow panelist, Sylvie Lemmet of the United Nations Environment Programme, pointed out that 95% of the 2050 building stock is already built in developed countries.

This is significant for cities that are trying to reduce their emissions since developed countries are the ones that need to make the greatest emissions cuts by 2050.  While it is relatively simple to regulate building efficiency prior to construction through the deployment of strong building ordinances, reaching already-constructed structures is a bit more challenging.

The other important point made by Vapaavuori is that building operation is more important than building construction in terms of emissions.  This is essential to think about from the policy perspective as  most urban policies–in the form of building codes or development credit–once again target new construction instead of renovation.

Much of the discussion focused on trying to figure out ways to create incentives for low-emission building renovation.  The problem now is that there is a significant up-front cost for high-efficiency upgrades.  While the upgrades pay for themselves in the long-run, consumers may not have access to the initial capital to invest in the upgraded equipment.  Furthermore, in highly mobile countries like the United States, homeowners may only be thinking of living in a house for a short time, making investment unwise.

It would be relatively easy to leverage the savings generated over the life of a high-efficiency building enhancement to finance the requisite up-front investment.  Some municipalities in California do this sort of thing where they establish a bond district that residents can tap into if they want to make an upgrade.  The municipality fronts the money and then property owners pay back the city at a realtively low interest rate and monthly cost over several decades.  If they sell the house, the new owner assumes the outstanding debt obligation.  Cities are already using these sorts of financing schemes to raise money for things like alley pavement and sidewalk construction.

A federal program providing the capital in this way would be a perfect clean energy stimulus scheme.

Dec 12

The negotiations here in Copenhagen have been proceeding rather slowly as fissures between the Alliance of Small Island States and the large developing countries have forced some delay in discussions.  The small island nation of Tuvalu has been pushing for a new, legally binding protocol which would keep global warming to a 1.5 degree level and keep the concentration of carbon in the atmosphere at 350ppm.  India and China are against even discussing the Tuvalu proposal given their satisfaction with the existing legal framework of the Kyoto Protocol, which does not require either country to restrict their emissions.

Copenhagen Police Follow Climate Marchers

Copenhagen Police Follow Climate Marchers

While the chair of the main Conference of the Parties has been trying to sort out a way to bridge this impasse, a perhaps more important draft text was released today [.pdf] by the chair of the Ad hoc Working Group on Long-term Cooperative Action [AWG-LCA].  The AWG-LCA is where the US has been concentrating its efforts towards coming up with a new global climate deal.   The US administration has said that they will not sign the Kyoto Protocol, so the general sentiment among Europe, Japan, Australia, and Canada is that some new framework has to be developed that China and India can support.

The draft text assumes the continuation of Kyoto and gives some numbers to consider next week as it pertains to mitigating emissions: acceptance of either 1.5 or 2 degrees of warming; reduction of global emissions by somewhere between 50-95 percent of 1990 levels by 2050; requiring developed countries to reduce GHGs by somewhere between 75-95 percent by 2050.

It also offers legally binding midterm mitigation targets for developed countries: between 25-45 percent from 1990 levels by 2020.  Developing countries are encouraged to reduce their emissions by 15-30 from business as usual levels by 2020.

Although some items like the institutional mechanism to funnel financing to the least developed countries for mitigation are unclear in the draft, it certainly seems like a fair text and is one which China and India will likely support.

The United States, Japan, the European Union, however, criticized the draft, with US negotiator Jonathan Pershing saying it “doesn’t work.”

Delegates will likely be working furiously in the next three days to get something on the table before ministers and heads of state descend on Copenhagen for the final days of the talks next week.

In the interim, thousands of people are marching in Copenhagen to put pressure on delegates in the Bella Center to conclude a deal.

Dec 11

Yesterday the US Secretary of the Interior, Ken Salazar, gave a speech at the UN Climate Change conference in Copenhagen. He is part of a cavalcade of high-level administration officials coming to Copenhagen in advance of President Obama’s participation in the high-level segment of negotiations next week.

Salazar laid out the administration’s standard line on climate change, asserting that “the United States understands the danger of climate change poses for the world” and laid out the vision of his department has for facing this challenge.

US Interior Secretary Ken Salazar at COP15

US Interior Secretary Ken Salazar at COP15

The Interior Department is a key government agency in addressing the climate problem due to the large amount of land that falls under its purview. Much of that land is in the Southwestern US in areas that could be ripe for renewable energy projects using wind and solar.

The most curious part of his talk was when he discussed “carbon capture.” He rightly mentioned the large swaths of forest land that need to be preserved to act as a carbon sink for sequestration and announced the release of a study by the US Geologic Survey that contends “the U.S. hypothetically have the potential to store an additional 3-7 billion metric tons of carbon in forests, if agricultural lands were to be used for planting forests. This potential is equivalent to 2 to 4 years of America’s current CO2 emissions from burning fossil fuels.”

But more troubling was his stance on the controversial practice of carbon capture and storage. This involves taking carbon emissions from a point source and injecting it into the ground to keep out of the atmosphere. This is largely an untested technology that hasn’t been implemented to any significant degree on a commercial scale. Issues like transporting the gassified CO2, and the permanence of its storage have not been adequately resolved. Coal companies, however, are counting on carbon capture and storage’s (CCS) viability to continue burning “clean coal” in a carbon-regulated environment.

Salazar was pushed by a questioner on the problems inherent in maintaining a coal-based energy policy given the problems with CCS. Salazar expressed confidence in the development of CCS technology and suggested that carbon could be stored on public lands. But this stance fails to look at the problems of coal extraction, which can disrupt landscapes and water quality when “mountaintop removal” techniques are used. Obama has been a consistent advocate of “clean coal” without, so Salazar’s position isn’t surprising. However, one would hope that the administration would take a more systematic analysis of CCS’ drawbacks.

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Dec 09

Yesterday the big media story at the UN climate talks in Copenhagen was the leaking of the Dutch Draft.  The Guardian–which broke the story–ran the headline that the leak sent the talks into “disarray” just hours after their release.

The draft text basically does away with the legal framework of the Kyoto Protocol and funnels all adaptation and development aid through the World Bank–non-starters with the Global South.

Many observers, however, were less hysterical.  Tan Copsey at China Dialogue has a good post saying that the draft text is just part of the business of negotiation.  Parties start out with unreasonable claims, then during the process of deliberation they “give” on their demands to come to an agreement.

That is not to say that the negotiations have been bereft of tension.  During today’s session there was a proposal on the table by Tuvalu which would establish a new “protocol” whose goal is to keep global warming to 1.5 degrees centigrade and push the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere to 350ppm.  This is the target that many environmentalists are pushing for and one that is required for Tuvalu and many other small island nations to stave off climate disaster.

Tuvalu’s proposal was immediately opposed by Saudi Arabia, China, India and a host of oil-rich states who equated a new protocol with an abandonment of the Kyoto accord.  The idea that the Tuvalu proposal takes Kyoto off the table is little hard to swallow, as there are numerous points in the draft that identify the precedence of Kyoto.  The opposition is probably more predicated on the fact that non-Annex 1 parties (like China and India) don’t want to open a new can of worms by even talking about a new protocol.  Kyoto works well for them as they are under no legal obligation to reduce emissions.

The debate got contentious enough that Tuvalu insisted on suspending the talks.  Currently, the Danish environment minister Connie Hedegaard is working to break the stalemate.

Activists are out in force, trying to express support for Tuvalu’s position.  It culminated in an action outside the plenary hall a couple of hours ago.  At this point it is difficult to see the precise portent this leaked draft may have, but it is probably safe to say there will be more drama before the national leaders arrive here next week.

Here is a short video shot by “dostafinski” outside the plenary:

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Dec 08

The European Union hosted a seminar at the Copenhagen climate talks today that discussed efforts underway in Sweden to develop sustainable cities.

The presentation included Swedish representatives of various levels of government–from the EU down to municipal officials.  Most compelling were the stories told about sustainable urbanism in the capital city of Stockholm and the southwestern city of Malmö.

Stockholm is the first city to be designated a European Green Capital by the European Commission.  This award recognizes local efforts to minimize environmental impact.  Deputy Mayor Ulla Hamilton discussed the city’s efforts to reach a 3 metric tonne per capita CO2 emissions rate by 2050.  Unlike North American cities where development tends to sprawl out from urban centers, Stockholm’s model has been to grow through infill and redevelopment.

One of the city’s development planners, Olle Cyren, described two development efforts: the first was Hammarby Sjöstad, which is looking to emit 50% less GHGs than a comparable development from 1990.  The second example discussed was the Royal Seaport, which is one of the largest real estate developments in Europe with 10,000 residential units and room for 30,000 workers.   This site is attempting to reach a per capita level of emissions of 2.5 tonnes–as a point of comparison, the US per capita level is about 20 tonnes!

The final presenter was Anders Rubin a Deputy Mayor from the city of Malmö.  Malmö is situated across the Öresund sound from Copenhagen.  Rubin charted the history of Malmö from its heyday as a shipping port and center of industry in the post-War era to a victim of deindustrialization where during the first three years of the 1990s the city lost a third of its jobs.

With a depressed economy and a shrinking population Malmö more or less had a “blank slate” for redevelopment, which city leaders chose to pursue with a decidedly green agenda.

They were helped quite a bit by the building of the Öresund Bridge in 2000, which improved transport links to Copenhagen.  The inevitable growth that accompanies a large infrastructure project like a bridge was coordinated with the introduction of green technology.  According to Rubin, half of Sweden’s solar electricity is produced in Malmö and he described a strategy of making rooftop solar panels especially conspicuous to provide the city with a distinct identity.  The city also boasts 40% of its population reporting that they commute to school or work by cycling.

These types of examples contradict the false idea that economic and urban growth MUST follow a high-carbon model.  Lessons learned from cases in Sweden can be especially valuable for US cities as they start to develop low-carbon policies.

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