The Econmist - USA (2021-10-30)

(Antfer) #1

4 SpecialreportStabilisingtheclimate TheEconomistOctober30th 2021


sheetsofGreenlandandwesternAntarcticaandmakingiteasier
formidsizedhurricanestointensifyintothemostpowerfulof
storms.Itisalsomakingitharderfornutrientsatdepthtogetto
thelivingthingsthatdependonthemclosetothesurfaceandre­
ducingoxygenlevels.Sealevelsarerisingbya centimetreevery
threeyearsorso.
Ifthiswerea continentalrearrangement,itwouldbea global
tectonicspasmwhichmovedallthecontinentsandtheirhapless
inhabitantsawayfromthepolesandtowardstheequatorwhile,at
thesametime,pushingonce­coolmountainheightsdownto­
wardsswelteringplainsandonce­stablecoastlinesbeneaththe
waves.Andit wouldbepickingupspeed.
ThereisnodoubtthatthechangeintheCO 2 levelwasbrought
aboutbyhumankind—mainlythroughtheburningoffossilfuels,
butalsothroughconversionofforestsandothernaturalecosys­
temstofarmland.Aslongasthoseactivitiescontinueintheircur­
rentform,theCO 2 levelwillcontinuetorise,andtheworldwill
movefurtherandmoredamaginglyawayfromitshistoricalstate.
In1992,whentheCO 2 levelhadreached356ppm andevidence
ofanthropogenicwarmingwas,ifnotoverwhelming,definitely
discernible,theleadersoftheworldagreedtodosomethingabout
thepotentiallycatastrophiccoursetheyhadmoreorlessunwit­
tinglyembarkedon.IntheunFrameworkConventiononClimate
Change(unfccc) agreeduponata summitinRiodeJaneirothat
year,theycommittedthemselvestothe“stabilisationofgreen­
house­gasconcentrationsintheatmosphereata levelthatwould
preventdangerousanthropogenicinterferencewiththeclimate
system”.Thiswastobedoneina “time­framesufficienttoallow
ecosystemstoadaptnaturallytoclimatechange,toensurethat
foodproductionisnotthreatenedandtoenableeconomicdevel­
opmenttoproceedina sustainablemanner”.
Thiswas,byfar,themostambitiousinternationalagreement
ofalltime.Thereisnowayofstabilisingtheclimatewithoutstop­
pingtheincreaseinthelevelsoflong­livedgreenhousegasesin
theatmosphere.Althoughit didnotsaysoinsomanywords—ma­
nymightnothavesignedupifithad—theunfccchad,ineffect,
committeditssignatoriestoendingthefossil­fuelage.

Anewera
Fossil fuels have been crucial to the development of the economy
for two centuries. They played an intimate part in the most impor­
tant  transformation  in  the  human  condition  since  the  develop­
ment of agriculture, a transformation that saw a huge growth both
in the world’s population and in people’s wealth. But their use also
gave  the  CO 2 level,  previously  part  of  the  background  against
which the human drama played out, a potentially show­stealing,

orevenshow­ending,role.Ithadtobebroughtundercontrol.It
hadtobestabilised.
Whiletheseremarkableaspirationsfloatedfreeofspecifictar­
gets,thesheermagnitudeofthetaskcouldbeignored,andig­
noreditlargelywas.In 2015 inParis,thesamegroupofcountries
tetheredtheiraspirationstoa setofspecificgoals,therebyreveal­
ingthebrutalsizeoftheundertaking.“Preventingdangerousan­
thropogenicchange”,saidtheParisagreement,meantinpractice,
“holdingtheincreaseintheglobalaveragetemperaturetowellbe­
low2°Cabovepre­industriallevelsandpursuingeffortstolimit
thetemperatureincreaseto1.5°Cabovepre­industriallevels”.As
tothetimeframe,thepeakingreenhouse­gasemissionsshould
comeabout“assoonaspossible”,thereshouldbe“rapidreduc­
tionsthereafter”,and“abalancebetweenanthropogenicemis­
sionsbysourcesandremovalsbysinksofgreenhousegases”(net­
zeroemissions)shouldbeachievedby“thesecondhalfofthis
century”—ie,inconsiderablylessthana humanlifespan.
AsthepartiestotheunfcccconvergeonGlasgowforthecop
26 summit, this special report looks at what those commitments
mean. It is not a guide to the specifics of carbon­cutting policies
and  technologies,  nor  to  the  particular  ways  in  which  national
commitments  made  in  Glasgow  will  fall  short  of  the  ambition
needed.  It  is  a  survey  of  the  scale  of  action  required,  the  battle­
ground on which it will be fought and the fundamental novelty of
undertaking to stabilise the climate. 
The  moment  when  the  CO 2 level,  so  flat  for  so  long,  began  to
rise was the inadvertent beginning of a new era in which the in­
dustrial economy and the forces of nature became conjoined. The
moment when the now perilously steep curve rounds the corner
to a new plateau, or even a steady decline, will be as consequential.
But the agreements in Rio and Paris say that this time it will not be
inadvertent. The curve­flattening climate stabilisation will be the
result of deliberate interventions in both the economy and nature
on a global scale. And it will be maintained, if itismaintained, by
human institutions with the astonishing, andpossibly hubristic,
mandate of long­term atmospheric management.n

The great right angle
Global atmospheric CO2 concentration, parts per million

Sources:OurWorldinData; NOAA

4000 2000

450

400

350

300

250

150010005001500100015002000250030003500

Pre-industrial range

BC AD

State of play

The Paris challenge


T


hatit tookalmost a quarter of a century of diplomatic wran­
gling,  setbacks  and  innovation  for  the  world  to  put  Paris’s
numbers  and  procedures  to  Rio’s  remarkable  ambition  makes  it
unsurprising that, as yet, little has been done to meet its goals. In
1992,  according  to  figures  from  Our  World  in  Data,  78%  of  the
world’s  primary  energy—the  stuff  used  to  produce  electricity,
drive  movement  and  provide  heat  both  for  industrial  purposes
and to warm buildings—came from fossil fuels. By 2019 the total
amount of primary energy used had risen by 60%. And the propor­
tion provided by fossil fuels was now 79%. 
Over the same period the share of primary energy provided as
electricity by modern renewables—wind turbines and solar pan­
els—rose from nothing to 3%. The share provided by nuclear pow­
er, which is also generated without fossil fuels, fell from 5.4% to
4%. Hydroelectricity was more or less stable at 6%.
Luckily, not all trends are linear. The highly subsidised growth
in renewables that began to take off in the early 2000s has not yet

Replacing fossil fuels is becoming easier. But temperatures
are still likely to rise too far
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