05/12/2015

Paris UN Climate Conference 2015: Australia Backs Target Of Limiting Warming To 1.5 Degrees

Fairfax - Peter Hannam & Tom Arup, Paris

Australia will support the inclusion of a goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees – the level demanded by low-lying countries most at risk from climate change – in a deal being negotiated in Paris in return for favourable carbon accounting rules.
The concession, extracted from Australia by the tiny Caribbean island nation of St Lucia and South Africa, followed lengthy negotiations in Paris aimed at resolving differences over how to treat carbon dioxide emissions.
A failure to remove that obstacle would have been embarrassing for the government after Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull had declared to world leaders on Monday in Paris that Australia would ratify the second stage of the Kyoto Protocol even though accounting rules had yet to be settled.
Environment Minister Greg Hunt: has agreed to support including a goal of limiting 1.5 degrees under a Paris climate deal as a trade-off for Australia getting its way on how its emissions are counted.
Environment Minister Greg Hunt: has agreed to support including a goal of limiting 1.5 degrees under a Paris climate deal as a trade-off for Australia getting its way on how its emissions are counted. Photo: Christopher Pearce

While Australia will back the 1.5 degree target being included, it does not mean it will introduce more aggressive climate change policies in line with this goal.
St Lucia and South Africa objected to Australia's preferred definition of emissions to include changes in land use. The recognition of a reduction in land clearing since the 1990s allowed Australia to meet its target under the protocol even as emissions continued to grow from industrial and other sources.
Australia secured the backing of the two nations during talks with Environment Minister Greg Hunt this week but only after it gave ground on two key areas, James Fletcher, St Lucia's Minister for Sustainable Development, told Fairfax Media.
James Fletcher, St Lucia's Minister for Sustainable Development, says the 1.5 degree long-term temperature goal is sacrosanct for small island developing states.
James Fletcher, St Lucia's Minister for Sustainable Development, says the 1.5 degree long-term temperature goal is sacrosanct for small island developing states. Photo: Peter Hannam

"In exchange, we said to the Australians, there was something that is sacrosanct for us as small island developing states and that is the 1.5 degree Celsius as a long-term temperature goal," Dr Fletcher said.
Australia will back the inclusion of the 1.5 degree target "not in the preamble statement, not in a very loose way, but in the purpose of the Paris agreement", he said.
The accounting rules will also be made more transparent so that Australia's preferred definition to include deforestation in its emissions will be clear to all, Dr Fletcher said. The move should also set a precedent for whatever agreement emerges in Paris.
Mr Hunt said it was "a good outcome all round and a very good outcome for the conference".
Australia would work constructively to have 1.5 degrees referenced in the text, but could not guarantee what others would do.
"Our formal target remains 2 degrees, but as we did at the Pacific Islands Forum, we think it would be important to reference 1.5 degrees in the text," he said.

​'Under the hood'
The result came at the end of the first week of the two-week summit. It was a "win-win" for the parties involved, Climate Institute deputy chief executive Erwin Jackson said.
"We get clarity on the rules the countries will use as transparency for the Kyoto targets, and – assuming Australia acts in good faith – it puts us in a position to build trust with the most vulnerable which will be critical to get an effective outcome in Paris," he said.
The prospect of dual accounting definitions means "countries will be able to look under the hood of what Australia is doing and clearly judge whether the target is Ferrari or a Morris Minor", Mr Jackson said.
Dr Fletcher said Mr Hunt had identified the accounting issue as "standing in the way" of ratification of the second stage of the Kyoto Protocol. Ratification would allow Australia to take advantage of surplus carbon credits from the first phase of the treaty while also permitting it to buy cheap international credits if it fails to meet its goal of cutting 2000-level emissions 5 per cent by 2020.
Without the deforestation credits, Australia's emissions from industry and households and other sources are on course to rise about 10 per cent on 2000 levels by the decade's end.

Taking stock of 1.5 degrees
Australia's backing could make a difference to whether the 1.5 degree goal ends up merely in the preamble of any Paris agreement or in the text itself.
If the latter occurs then any reviews and stocktakes of emissions targets under the Paris pact would have to use the 1.5 degree goal as one of its benchmark – not just the 2 degrees agreed at the Copenhagen summit in 2009.
The world has already warmed about 1 degree and the carbon emissions plans put forward by almost 200 nations attending the Paris talks would potentially lift temperatures by 2.7 degrees, or well above the level of global warming considered dangerous for climate change.
A negotiator for a small island nation said some developed countries were aiming for the 1.5 degree goal to be merely included in the preamble of any agreement – where it would instead be largely symbolic. But the negotiator said to get an accord in Paris it was increasingly recognised the 1.5 degree goal would have to be in the text because of the sheer number of countries backing it.
The negotiator went on to say India and Saudi Arabia were seeking to block recognition of 1.5 degrees, including consideration of a review of the goal carried out under the UN climate negotiations.
He said island states were now proposing that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) carry out a special report on the impacts of 1.5 degrees. But India and Saudi Arabia were again moving to block that proposal.
Mr Hunt, who met the new IPCC head Dr Hoesung Lee on Friday, said a review of the impact of 1.5 degrees by the top climate science body "would be constructive and we have also raised that with the IPCC as a potential area of study for them".

Support broadens
Germany and France have also expressed support for including the 1.5 degree target in the agreement during the week.
Speaking to the media on Friday the lead negotiator for the United States, Todd Stern, said his country heard the concerns of vulnerable nations and thought them legitimate, but had not landed anywhere yet on the 1.5 degree goal.
Elsewhere negotiators were preparing to work through the night to try to pare back a draft text for the Paris agreement in time for it to be handed over to the French organisers on Saturday.
However, there was wide recognition that the text would still be unwieldy when it was delivered to the French ahead of government ministers including Australia's Foreign Minister Julie Bishop, flying in for the second week of negotiations.

Tensions
During the week tensions had emerged on the tough issues of climate funding for poor nations, after some industrialised countries pushed to try to expand the list of countries who would contribute financially to include the more advanced developing economies.
The European Union presented a compromised position on financing saying the rich nations would contribute a minimum of $US100 billion ($136 billion) a year from 2020 but if the donor base was expanded that number could rise.
The United States and Australia, which had been among the countries pushing hard in the negotiations to get language in place to expand the donor base, appeared to relent a little. It is understood Australia is watching to see how the European proposal lands.

Southern India Is Hit With Deadly Flooding After Wettest December Day In 100 Years

ThinkProgress - Katie Valentine

Volunteers rescue flood affected people on a country boat from a residential area in Chennai, India, Thursday, Dec. 3, 2015. AP Photo

Extreme rainfall in southern India has killed nearly 270 people and displaced about a million more, as flooding causes major problems in the state of Tamil Nadu.
Chennai, the capital of Tamil Nadu and fourth-most-populous city in India, experienced its wettest December day in over a century this week, according to AccuWeather. That follows a November that brought the city 300 percent more rain than is usual for the month. Monsoon winds typically bring rainfall to Chennai during October, November, and December, but rainfall this year has been exceptional — the city and surrounding region has gotten more than 11 inches of rainfall over the last several days, which, as the LA Times reports, is about 75 percent of the average for the whole monsoon season.
"The rain has been abnormal. People have not seen this rain in their lifetime," Jomey Joseph, head of the Chennai office of Catholic Relief Services, told TIME.
Atul Yadav/ Press Trust of India via AP

Weather experts have said that this year, a strong El Niño ramped up the monsoon rains in India. And multiple outlets have pointed out that illegal construction and inadequate planning have left Chennai unprepared for deluges like this.
AP Photo


Climate change has been shown to make extreme weather events like flooding more likely and more intense, but it's hard to say how much climate change played a role in any one weather event, including India's floods. Still, the news of India's flooding has made it to the Paris climate talks, where world leaders are meeting to hash out an international agreement on climate.
"The unprecedented magnitude of the flooding confirms yet again that we no longer have time. We must take concrete and urgent action against climate disruption," French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said.
AP Photo


And it's true that, though this current flooding may have been more El Niño-driven than climate-driven, the monsoon rains could be affected as the earth warms. A study last year found that extreme periods of wet and dry weather within Indian monsoon seasons have increased in the last 34 years. Another 2014 study found that Asian monsoons could intensify as temperatures warm and atmospheric carbon dioxide levels climb.
"It's difficult to say for certain that a particular extreme event for the monsoon is attributable to anthropogenic climate change – like the Pakistan floods of 2010 – but we do know that with a warming climate more moisture can be held in the atmosphere, leading to heavier rainfall when it does occur," the Royal Meteorological Society writes. "It is also thought that interannual variability of the monsoon will increase in future, whatever happens to its main driver, El Niño."
World Resources Institute (WRI) India's adaptation strategy head Nambi Appardurai said in a blog post that the flooding in India should be an "eye-opener" for planners in the country.
"While we can't draw a direct connection between events in southern India and climate change, severe flooding is in line with projections of the worst effects of a changing climate and a warmer world," he writes, continuing, "we need world leaders to take action and prepare for mounting impacts of climate change. For some this is abstract; for me and my family, there is literally no time to waste."

Businesses to Get Guidelines for Disclosing Climate-Related Risks

New York Times - Sewell Chan

Michael R. Bloomberg, the former mayor of New York, at the Paris climate talks on Friday. Ian Langsdon/European Pressphoto Agency

LE BOURGET, France — Climate change is going to have a powerful effect on capitalism, and the titans of industry and finance are trying to get a handle on it.
"No C.E.O. could survive if they tried to say that climate change isn't real," Michael R. Bloomberg, the former mayor of New York and co-founder of Bloomberg L.P., said on Friday.
He was joined by Mark Carney, a Canadian economist who is the governor of the Bank of England and the chairman of the Financial Stability Board, an international body that makes recommendations about the global financial system.
Mr. Carney announced on Friday that Mr. Bloomberg would lead a task force to draw up guidelines for companies to use when disclosing climate-related risks to lenders, insurers and investors.
Mr. Carney made headlines in September when he said in a speech that climate change posed huge risks to financial and economic stability.
Elaborating on that theme, he said on Friday that capitalism needed time to adapt to a low-carbon economy.
"What we don't want to see is an abrupt transition," Mr. Carney said. "The issue that the private sector has — whether they're investors in companies, or providers of capital and credit — the issue is that they don't have the right information to judge how well individual companies are managing that risk."
Mr. Bloomberg's task force "ideally is going to be the one-stop shop for the right principles around climate, so that there can be a true market in the transition toward a low-carbon economy," Mr. Carney added.
Climate-related transparency has been big news lately. Last month, the New York State attorney general, Eric T. Schneiderman, began an investigation to examine whether Exxon Mobil accurately communicated climate risks to shareholders.
Mr. Bloomberg expressed contempt for the "right-wing crazies that say climate change is a communist plot that doesn't exist." He added that politicians, unlike businesspeople, could afford to take extreme positions.
"This is theater," he said, when asked about the Republican primaries. "It really is a serious issue as to what a candidate would do if they ever got elected, but I don't know if you could find that out from the kabuki dance that we go through to select candidates."
Governments can send the right signals, but ultimately the markets and consumers will see the light, he said.
"In the end, the public's a lot smarter than they're given credit for by the press, and a lot smarter than the government," Mr. Bloomberg said.
Mr. Carney pointed out something that until recently only activists had been saying: It may take a long while, but for global warming to stop, carbon emissions will have to drop to almost nothing.
"Ultimately, whatever degrees of centigrade the climate settles at, you have to get to net zero, ultimately, to stabilize, whether it's two degrees or beyond," he said.

Paris Climate Talks: Tuvalu Pm Enele Sosene Sopoaga Criticises Demand For Evidence Of Claims

ABC News - Reuters

Mangrove plantations to help protect the Tuvalu coastline from erosion as climate change brings more storm surges. File: Oxfam/Rodney Dekker

Tuvalu's prime minister says his country is being expected to provide unreasonably robust scientific evidence to prove it is a victim of climate change to qualify for international support.
Enele Sosene Sopoaga issued another stark warning to fellow negotiators at the Paris climate talks that without a binding deal to limit global warming, his tiny Pacific island nation could be wiped out.
He said the required evidence was hard to come by in a nation of only 12,000.
Tropical Cyclone Pam devastated its outlying coral atolls in March this year, and the government is still providing food aid to many residents who saw crops and homes destroyed.
After a meeting with the president of the climate talks French foreign minister Laurent Fabius, Mr Sopoaga said climate change was a challenge for the whole world.
"I think there's a moral challenge to people of the world," he said.
"Are we going to allow this to happen to some of our fellow nations?
"If we can reach the planets and ... the Moon, and we cannot save our own kinds, this is a shameful world."
Mr Sopoaga said that the deck had been stacked against small countries, like his, which do not have enough delegates to attend the vast numbers of working groups happening at the conference.
Almost 200 nations are meeting in Paris until December 11, trying to work out a deal to limit a rise in temperatures blamed on increasing emissions of greenhouse gases.

No deal yet but negotiators optimistic
Negotiations to agree on a draft text for a climate change deal to be debated by ministers in Paris next week are "not there yet", the chairman of the talks said.
Mr Fabius, who is also the chief negotiator, said two alternative new draft texts had been produced ahead of a Saturday deadline.
"I really hope that the spirit of compromise will allow us to move forward. I hope that the text I'm going to be handed will record new steps towards a compromise," Mr Fabius said.
Mr Fabius repeatedly declined to discuss areas of disagreement, and the executive secretary of the United Nations climate committee Christiana Figueres said that there was not one subject which was holding things up.
"It's important to understand that there is no one, single factor that can be advanced without the others. This is very, very much of a balancing act, it's a political balance, it's an operational balance, it is all part of a coherent and integrated effort to change the course of the economy," Ms Figueres said.
Leaders of island nations under threat by rising sea levels with US president Barack Obama at the World Climate Change Conference 2015 in Paris, France. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

Negotiators are in a better position than they were at the last major summit in Copenhagen in 2009 where talks ended in chaos, Ms Figueres said, adding she was optimistic.
Outside, demonstrators gathered to say that even the 2C warming target discussed by many was not enough to protect countries vulnerable to climate change and rising sea levels, including many island nations in the Pacific.
A study published this week showed that many from Tuvalu and its Pacific neighbours would consider migrating if the droughts, floods and sea levels continued to rise, though few have the money to do so.
Researchers projected that international migration would increase sharply by 2055 from Tuvalu, Kiribati and Nauru.
The study found storms and "king tides" are likely to worsen. Sea levels have risen about 20 centimetres in the past century.
The Australian Youth Climate coalition said the next generation would be left to pay the price for government inaction, and highlighted that some countries were not to be constrained by the 1.5C limit.
"In particular countries that we're calling on to listen to our message are countries that have been blockers in these negotiations so: Saudi Arabia, India, China and the US have all been pushing back really hard on the 1.5C being included in the text and these are the countries that we want to hear our voice because we're the ones who are going to have to live with the impacts of climate change," member Moira Cully said.

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