Ronald Bailey | November 17, 2006
NAIROBI—"Climate change tourists" is how Kenyan Maasai leader of environmental group Practical Action Sharon Looremeta dismissed the diplomats negotiating over what to do about global warming here in Nairobi. "You come here to look at some climate impacts and some poor people suffering, and then climb on your airplanes and head home," she bitterly added. She was expressing the widespread frustration of many African representatives who were hoping that the conference would result in "new mechanisms to help sustainable development in Africa" and "more funds for adaptation." In other words, they expected cash.
Nothing much—good or bad—was accomplished at
the 12th Conference of the Parties (COP-12) of the UN's
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) chiefly because
most other countries are waiting for the United States. Unless the
US jumps on the global warming bandwagon, the Kyoto Protocol
signatories will do nothing much more on the issue. In particular,
the chief thing other nations are waiting for is the end of
President Bush's Administration in January, 2009.
No substantive negotiations are taking place
here in Nairobi for another reason too. At the insistence of the US
at the last climate change meeting in Montreal in 2005, the
delegates agreed to launch a "dialogue" on climate change that
explicitly would not involve any negotiations. So for the last two
days, environment ministers from around the globe have been
listening to and discussing presentations from various experts on
development and on applying markets to climate change. "The purpose
of the dialogue is to take people out of the tensions and concerns
of negotiations and allow them to rethink possibilities," said
Howard Bamsey, the dialogue's co-facilitator at a UNFCCC
secretariat press conference today.
And perhaps some rethinking has been going on. Halldor Thorgeirsson, deputy executive secretary of the UNFCCC, mentioned that a South African delegate had made interesting observation. The South African turned the usual formulation of "what can we do to pursue development under the constraints imposed by climate change" on its head to "what can we do to address climate change under the constraints of the need for development and poverty eradication?"
Poverty eradication is a massive problem. Just
how massive was made clear by the vice president for sustainable
development at the World Bank, Katherine Sierra, when she pointed
out in speech to the delegates that developing countries need
annual investment for electricity supply of $165 billion through
2010 and afterwards investment needs would increase at 3 percent
per year. The real heartbreaker came when she noted that the
current energy supply investments planned for Africa "will increase
poor people's access to energy in Sub-Saharan Africa from 23
percent today to 47 percent by 2030." In other words, half the
people in Sub-Saharan Africa still won't have access to modern
energy supplies in 25 years! Half! Frankly, it's hard to
imagine that climate change projected for the next five decades can
wreak as much havoc on the lives of poor Africans as the lack of
modern energy supplies does today. International bureaucrats also
myopically worry that as climate worsens, that a lot of overseas
development aid will have to be channeled away from development
into disaster relief. How about growing economies so that poor
people like Sharon Looremeta in impoverished countries don't need
development aid because they have created their
own resources which would enable them to bounce
back from whatever disasters assault them? Now
that would be some interesting rethinking.
Some surprising rethinking may also be taking place among America's climate negotiators. The leader of the US delegation at the conference, Undersecretary of State Paula Dobriansky, reportedly said that the Bush Administration is closely watching the how California and nine Northeastern states reduce their emissions of greenhouse gases (GHG). "We welcome the pursuit of these different strategies and we want to see how they evolve," she said to the Associated Press. She even didn't rule out the possibility that the Bush Administration could end its resistance to mandatory limits on greenhouse gases (GHG).
Meanwhile, three senators—Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), Jeff
Bingaman (D-N.M.) and Joseph Lieberman (CFL-Conn.) issued a letter
saying "the US must move quickly to adopt economy-wide constraints
on GHG emissions and then work with the international community to
forge an effective and equitable global agreement." These senators
believe that the global warming will be an election issue in 2008.
And it may be, especially if some weather disaster on the scale of
Hurricane Katrina sails in during the campaign. A post-election
Zogby poll found that a majority of
Americans agreed that elected officials “should make combating
global warming a high priority."
However, a lot depends on what the senators mean by an "equitable
global agreement." While the Green wing of the Democratic Party may
be all in favor imposing limits on carbon dioxide, the Party's
union supporters, who work industry, transport and power
generation, will be reluctant to go along. The Democrats, just like
President Bush, will have to argue that emissions limits must be
imposed on developing countries, especially China, India, and
Brazil, because otherwise those countries would be able to
out-compete American industry and workers. If those countries
refuse to go along, the Democrats may end up joining with the
Europeans who are calling for punitive tariffs on goods imported
from countries that don't restrict their carbon dioxide emissions.
For me, this raises the fear that imposing carbon dioxide
emissions limits without somehow including all the big emitters
could unravel all the painful progress the world has made toward
freer trade among nations. Dismantling the World Trade Organization
would destroy vast amounts of wealth and end up impoverishing the
world's poorest people even more than any projected climate change.
For example, a 2002 Institute for International Economics study
found that just reducing current trade barriers could
add $600 billion to global GDP and raise incomes in the world's
poorest countries by an average of 20 percent. Much more would be
at stake if the countries started erecting new trade barriers. The
IIE's figure compares very nicely with the $450 billion dollars
(1 percent of
global GDP) that Britain's recently released
Stern Review calculated would be needed to be spent annually to
cut the emissions of greenhouse gases to an acceptable
level.
While the Nairobi climate conference was mostly about dialogue,
negotiations did result in some small measures being taken around
the edges of the Kyoto Protocol. For example, the plenary session
voted to launch an Adaptation Fund which is designed to channel
money skimmed from Clean Development Mechanism projects to poor
countries to help them adapt to climate change. There was some
controversy over which UN agency should run it, but as UNFCCC
executive secretary Yvo de Boer noted, it's not important to
resolve right now because the fund only has $3 million in
it.
Finally, as expected the COP-12 did not set any new tough caps
on greenhouse gas emissions for the industrialized country
signatories of the Kyoto Protocol when it runs out in 2012. The
COP-12 did set a deadline of 2008 for finishing a review of the
Protocol's effectiveness which could pave the way to negotiations
over future reduction commitments. However, developing nations will
not be pushed to agree to emissions reductions as part of the
review process. Basically, while the Kyoto Protocol signatories
wait out the Bush Administration, the delegates agreed to agree two
years from now. And of course, the important thing is to decide
where next year's meeting will be held. Apparently,
COP-13 will be hosted by Indonesia in Bali.
Ronald Bailey is Reason's science
correspondent. His book Liberation Biology: The
Scientific and Moral Case for the Biotech Revolution is now
available from Prometheus Books.
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