Two thousand seven is barely a fortnight old, but it's already shaping up to be the year that climate change action reaches a tipping point. The signs seem to be everywhere.
For example, the London-based Guardian reported recently that "George Bush is preparing to make a historic shift in his position on global warming when he makes his State of the Union speech later this month," perhaps agreeing to a U.S. cap on greenhouse gas emissions for the first time, the paper suggests.
And then there's the Reuters story just out revealing that Exxon met with U.S. environmental groups last month to discuss how the heretofore recalcitrant oil giant might finally respond proactively to global warming. Reported Reuters: "This move was the latest hint that the world's biggest public company could be open to shifting its position of opposing mandatory caps on emissions of heat-trapping gases."
Another compelling development is a new group formed by some of the world's largest companies last week, with an aim to putting "a global framework coming into force in 2013." Translated, that means developing an effective global climate protection policy for the period following the expiration of the Kyoto Protocol in 2013.
The new group, calling itself the 3C Initiative -- for Combat Climate Change -- formed with little fanfare on January 11 in Brussels. It began its life with 18 major corporate members, many from the energy sector, including both power companies (Duke Energy, Endesa, Eskom, PG&E, Suez, Vattenfall) and manufacturers of power-generating equipment (ABB, Alstom, GE, Siemens). The group has issued an "urgent request to the global community and all its representatives" to join in. The goal, says 3C, is:
to underline the need for urgent action by the global community and to influence the post-Kyoto process by demanding a global framework supporting a market-based solution to the climate change issue. This can be achieved by getting as many companies as possible aboard and by getting our common platform well known and well understood.What's going on here? Has the global business community finally seen the light -- or, perhaps, felt the heat?
The model is based on the assumption that an overwhelming majority of all countries commit to participate in the system given that they will only face restrictions once the country is wealthy enough in relative terms. The long-term predictability and the flexibility needed for economic growth can thereby be sustained. Most important is that we start now by forming a burden-sharing model built on commitments to long-term reductions."Curbing climate change is about combining technology, finance, and policy in a wise way," write the report's authors. "If that is done worldwide a carbon dioxide market will follow. Technology is not an unsolvable problem, given time and incentives, neither is financing. The real challenge is policy."
It all sounds so . . . sensible. Something that should have happened long ago.
- All countries should participate -- participation is a part of being a member of the global community.
- No poor country shall be denied its right to economic development -- no extra cost burden on the poorest.
- No rich country shall have to go through disruptive change.
- Richer countries pull a larger weight (emission caps do not embrace countries until they have reached a certain economic level; poorer countries with caps get higher allocations compared to richer countries).
- There shall be a level playing field. The proposed framework shall not change relative competitiveness.
- The system shall be robust. As new knowledge is accumulated parameters may change, but not the principles underlying the system.
- Emission caps should be binding.
- Emission allowances are allocated to each country in relation to its share of gross global product (i.e. gross GDP).
- The final allocation to individual companies or facilities will be made at the national level.
- The mechanism should be able to achieve wide acceptance as being fair and balanced.
We have a vision and a plan for how to move forward, which could result in almost 80 percent decrease of carbon dioxide CO2 emissions, that would stabilise our atmosphere.You can click here to see a presentation of the plan, which extends for the next 100 years.
See ClimateBiz.com