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Climate Change: our final Tragedy of the Commons? Kevin Anderson Tyndall Centre 2012.

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Presentation on theme: "Climate Change: our final Tragedy of the Commons? Kevin Anderson Tyndall Centre 2012."— Presentation transcript:

1 Climate Change: our final Tragedy of the Commons? Kevin Anderson Tyndall Centre 2012

2 Manchester Energy Presentation outline  Current aspirations and emission trends  Why we should strive for 2°C  The levels of mitigation required of the UK  Behavioural and technical opportunities  Messages for business  Summary

3 Manchester Energy  “When I look at this [CO 2 ] data, the trend is perfectly in line with a temperature increase of 6 degrees Celsius, which would have devastating consequences for the planet.”  “we have 5 years to change the energy system – or have it changed” Fatih Birol - IEA chief economist Similar concerns expressed by government chief scientists, PwC, World Bank The international energy agency’s view on climate change

4 Manchester Energy  International ‘To hold the increase in global temperature below 2 degrees Celsius and take action.. consistent with science and on the basis of equity‘  EU ‘ must ensure global average temperature increases do not exceed preindustrial levels by more than 2°C’  UK‘ average global temperatures must rise no more than 2°C’ Climate change commitments

5  How do 2 & 4°C futures fit with CO 2 trends?  What is the role of energy?

6 Year Billion tonnes CO 2 Global emission of fossil fuel CO 2 (inc. cement)

7 Year Billion tonnes CO 2 Global emission of fossil fuel CO 2 (inc. cement) RIO Earth Summit UN Climate change panel established (IPCC) Royal Commission report (60% by 2050) David King CC most dangerous threat Copenhagen Accord Rio + 20

8 Year Billion tonnes CO 2 Global emission of fossil fuel CO 2 (inc. cement) Rio + 20 Global economic downturn … yet emissions have continued to rise (~6% in 2010, ~3% 2011 & 12)

9 Year Billion tonnes CO 2 Global emission of fossil fuel CO 2 (inc. cement) Rio + 20 … so what of future emissions?

10 Year Billion tonnes CO 2 Global emission of fossil fuel CO 2 (inc. cement) Rio + 20 Energy system design lives (lock-in)  Supply technologies 25-50 year  Large scale infrastructures  Built environment  Aircraft and ships ~30 years 30-100 years

11 Year Billion tonnes CO 2 Global emission of fossil fuel CO 2 (inc. cement) Rio + 20 … and assuming current mitigation plans

12 Year Billion tonnes CO 2 Global emission of fossil fuel CO 2 (inc. cement) Rio + 20 ~3000GtCO 2 for 2000-2050 ~5000GtCO 2 for 2000-2100 … i.e. a 4 ° C – 6 ° C rise between 2050 & 2100

13 Year Billion tonnes CO 2 Global emission of fossil fuel CO 2 (inc. cement) Rio + 20

14 Year Billion tonnes CO 2 Global emission of fossil fuel CO 2 (inc. cement) Rio + 20 … but building low/zero carbon electrical supply needs to begin now Too early for supply DemandDemand SUPPLY & demand

15 So, if 2°C is too challenging, what about 4°C – or more?

16 5°C - 6°C global land mean … & increase °C on the hottest days of: 8°C - 10°C in Central Europe In low latitudes 4°C gives up to 40% reduction in maize & rice as population heads towards 9 billion by 2050 For 4°C global mean surface temperature

17  incompatible with an organised global community  beyond ‘adaptation’  devastating to eco-systems  highly unlikely to be stable (‘tipping points) … consequently … 4°C should be avoided at ‘all’ costs There is a widespread view that 4°C is:

18  10% reduction in emissions year on year  40% reduction by 2015  70% 2020  90+% 2030 UK energy and the 2°C challenge Impossible? … is living with a 4°C global temperature rise by 2050-70 less impossible?

19 Where to from here?

20 Who needs to lead on these reductions? Pareto’s 80:20 rule 80% of something relates to … 20% of those involved ~50% of emissions from ~1% of population … as a guide 40-60% emissions from 1-5% population run this 3 times ~80% of emissions from ~20% of population

21 Who’s in the 1-to-5%?  Climate scientists  Climate journalists & pontificators  OECD (& other) academics  Anyone who gets on a plane  For the UK anyone earning over £30k

22 What options are there technically? Fuel Production, Extraction &Transport PowerstationTransmission Electricity Consumption Light, Refrig n 105054120133 The Electricity system Demand opportunities dwarf those from supply in short-term

23 What options are there technically? Car efficiency (without rebound )  EU 2015 plan 130g/km (fleet mean with buy out)  2008 BMW 109g/km, VW, 85-99g/km; 1998 Audi A2 ~ 75g/km  ~8 year penetration of new cars … ~90% of vehicle-km ~40-50% CO 2 reduction by 2020 with no new technology  Reverse recent trends in occupancy ~60-70% reduction by 2020

24 So what do we know?

25 For businesses the message is simple but uncomfortable  Should avoid 4°C at all costs  Need ~70% decarbonisation over next 5-10 years  Only small % of global population need to mitigate  Low carbon energy supply is too little too late in the West  Principal response is to reduce energy demand now  Carbon trading & prices are not viable for non-marginal (large) reductions

26 Headline messages  Change behaviour - today (producers and consumers)  Improve technology - now & over the next few years  Consume less

27 To Summarise

28 Uncomfortable conclusions from conservative analysis  Link between cumulative emissions & temp’ is broadly correct  Non-OECD nations peak emissions by 2025/30  There are rapid reductions in deforestation & food emissions  No ‘discontinuities’ (tipping points) occur & Stern/CCC/IEA’s “feasible” reductions of 3-4% p.a. is achieved  2°C stabilisation is virtually impossible  4°C by 2050-2070 looks ‘likely’ (could be earlier & on the way to 6°C+)

29 So … for businesses?  Lead by example  Don’t be the exception - (cars, planes, ships – all argue to be treated leniently)  Don’t hide behind blame of others - (UK blames China, China blame US …)  Consider the system - (e.g. shale’s impact on coal use, etc.)  Acknowledge it is not going to be easy – it will often hurt

30 So … for businesses? Be courageous as business leaders and as citizens Mitigate for 2°C, but plan for 4°C – or more

31 … and finally “… this is not a message of futility, but a wake-up call of where our rose-tinted spectacles have brought us. Real hope, if it is to arise at all, will do so from a bare assessment of the scale of the challenge we now face.” Anderson & Bows. Royal Society 2011

32 … and finally “at every level the greatest obstacle to transforming the world is that we lack the clarity and imagination to conceive that it could be different.” Roberto Unger

33 Kevin Anderson Tyndall Centre 2012 End


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