03/02/2021

(AU) Australia Needs To Stop Thinking That Setting A Target Of Zero Emissions By 2050 Is Good Enough

The Guardian

Political parties have to tell us what they are doing to keep within our carbon budget

‘If we want to do it in a nice straight line, we need to reach 50% cuts by 2030 and net zero by 2045.That is the least disruptive timeline.’ Photograph: Dean Lewins/AAP 

We need to change how we talk about climate change policy. No longer can we hand out pass marks for irrelevant targets that sound good but actually fail to prevent climate change.

Back in 2018, the IPCC announced that we had 12 years to limit temperatures to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels.

This set off a lot of focus on different numbers: net zero by 2050 or 2045, 45% cuts by 2030 or 2035, 26% by 2030:


It’s no surprise that voters didn’t really grasp what is going on, because these targets actually disguise the reality of the task at hand and serve only to confuse.

Right now, the Morrison government remains wedded to a 26% cut in emissions from 2005 levels by 2030 and yet are on target for just 22%.

Before the last election the ALP pledged a 45% cut by 2030, but now is fudging because the government itself is unwilling to set a target beyond 2030 until after the next election.

Last year the talk was that the ALP would push the 45% cut out to 2035.

You can understand why voters tune out a bit – I mean is there much difference between 45% by 2030 or 2035, or between getting to zero by 2045 or 2050?

Yes there is – a massive difference.

And the reason is why a report last week by the Climate Targets Panel argues we need a 50% cut by 2030.

For, you see, the numbers we should focus on are not 2045 or 2050 but 6,161 and 3,521.

Or, to be precise: 6,161Gt C02-e and 3,521Gt C02-e.

These are the actual amount of carbon we can emit to keep temperatures below either 1.5C or 2C above pre-industrial levels.

The carbon emitted last year doesn’t get wiped away – it stays, adding to the impact of climate change.

Because we know the impact of carbon on temperatures, we can estimate how much more carbon can be emitted before there is too much in the atmosphere to prevent temperatures rising by certain amounts.

Research by Melbourne University climate scientist Malte Meinshausen done for the Victorian government estimates that Australia’s share of the global carbon budget is 6,161Gt C02-e in order to stay below a 2C increase, and 3,521Gt C02-e to stay below a 1.5C increase.

If we emit more than that we are contributing towards those higher temperatures.

This is the true vandalism of the Abbott-Turnbull-Morrison governments – their choices to increase emissions mean much greater cuts now are needed.

Think of it like a bank account.

Imagine you have $61,610 to last you for 30 weeks. That works out at $2,053 dollars to spend a week. But what if you spend $48,880 in the first 10 weeks?

Oops. You just used up 79% of your budget in a third of the time.

This is what we are currently projected to do with our carbon budget.

The latest government projections are for Australia to emit 4,880Gt C02-e in the 10 years to 2030.

If we keep on that path, we will use up all of our 2C budget of 6,161GT C02-e by 2033:


 And this is where the difference between those median-term targets matter.

Were the ALP to extend its median target of a 45% cut to 2035, that would actually be a pledge to use up all of our carbon budget by 2035.

A target of a 45% cut by 2035 is a target to fail.

The reason why the Carbon Target Panel argues we need a 50% cut by 2030 is because that trend will keep us from using up all of the 2C budget.

The bad news? Even that target will have us use up the carbon budget of 3,521GT C02-e we need to limit ourselves to limit temperatures below 1.5C.

The only way we can keep within the 1.5C budget it to target net zero emissions by 2035 – that would require cutting emissions by nearly three quarters by 2030:


The problem is that because emissions stay in the atmosphere, even if the government were to announce it will target net zero emissions by 2050, given how much will have been emitted by 2030 we will still go more than 50% over our carbon budget:


This is why, if Scott Morrison comes out and pledges getting to zero by 2050, no one should give him any credit whatsoever.

Unless he explains how he will do so and keep within our carbon budget, the pledge will be meaningless.

Currently if we want to do it in a nice straight line, we need to reach 50% cuts by 2030 and net zero by 2045.

That is the least disruptive timeline.

But if we keep on the current rate, so much of our budget will we have used by 2030 that we will need to slash emissions drastically and get to next zero by 2036:


A target of 45% cut by 2035 gives us no hope, and a target of 45% by 2030 means we would need to then get to zero by 2042.

So we need to stop thinking that setting a target of zero emissions by 2050 is good enough – we need to be asking what political parties are doing to keep within our carbon budget.

And if they don’t know, then we should treat their policies with the contempt they deserve.

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(AU) Climate Change And Canberra’s Fossilised ‘Functional Realities’

Sydney Morning HeraldNick O'Malley

There was a telling moment bound up in an awkward pause during a parliamentary hearing on Friday into a climate change bill proposed by the independent MP Zali Steggall.

Liberal MP Trent Zimmerman asked a witness – Dr Angela Frimberger, a biologist turned climate activist – whether it was reasonable for a government to direct independent expert advisers to not provide them with advice that they did not want to hear and had no intention of acting upon.

Zali Steggall’s proposed climate change bill has broad support, but is very unlikely to become law. Credit: Alex Ellinghausen

The exchange was significant because in the unlikely event Steggall’s bill became law, it would legislate a net-zero emissions by 2050 target and create an independent climate change commission to provide the government with advice on how to reach that goal.

Zimmerman’s point was, should such a commission be created, why shouldn’t the government of the day order it not to provide advice over the reinstitution of a price on carbon, given neither party wanted to pursue such a policy?

“I would have thought it was not an unreasonable proposition to say that a government could indicate to a commission the parameters it was prepared to consider so [the commission] did not go down the path of providing advice that would have no functional reality in policy,” Zimmerman said.

Australia leading world with record renewable take-up, new data finds
In the pause that followed, you could hear the collective agony of the scientists who have begged politicians the world over for decades for meaningful climate action.

“But if carbon pricing was the most effective mechanism to achieve the outcome, then shouldn’t the government take advice from the independent body whose sole purpose is to provide that advice?” responded Frimberger after a beat or two.

“If the majority of the political spectrum has already made a determination that it is not prepared to go down that path, then it is meaningless in some ways,” said Zimmerman, ceding no ground.

Frimberger tried again: “But shouldn’t the majority of the political spectrum take expert advice?”

At this point the chairman stepped in and put the debate out of its misery, with Zimmerman presumably still certain of the primacy of “functional reality” and Frimberger still apparently more concerned with, well, reality.

Functional reality has retarded climate action in Australia – longer than it has in comparable nations – in large part because we create our wealth not just by the use of fossil fuel but by its export. But around the world, functional reality is being rapidly overwhelmed by climate reality.

Scott Morrison goaded the Labor Party with a lump of coal in Parliament in 2017. Credit: Alex Ellinghausen

Capital markets are abandoning fossil fuels and turning to green technology. Governments in Europe, Asia and now the United States are supercharging the shift with net-zero targets.

Last week the world’s largest investor, BlackRock, with more than $10 trillion in funds under management, reaffirmed that climate change and associated risk management would remain at the heart of its investment strategy.

General Motors aiming to eliminate petrol and diesel cars by 2035
Since then the London-based asset management group Aviva announced that not only would it divest from carbon-heavy businesses, it would no longer provide credit to them. It set a three-year timetable for companies to announce net-zero targets and strategies.

In an opinion piece published in the Financial Times over the weekend entitled Wall Street’s new mantra: green is good, the financial journalist and author Gillian Tett writes she has identified a significant shift in attitudes towards so-called environmental, social and governance (ESG) criteria – the standards companies set for their operations that can be tested and measured by the market.

Not long ago ESG was ring-fenced from general operations, used as a tool to signal good intentions to investor activists who wanted to change the world.

Morrison eyeing more ambitious climate target of net zero by 2050
Capital markets are abandoning fossil fuels and turning to green technology. Governments are supercharging the shift with net-zero targets.

Today, argues Tett, it is at the heart of operations, used by companies seeking to “avoid reputational risks, retain customers and employees, and sidestep losses”.

Tett quotes Anne Finucane, vice-chair of Bank of America, who estimates that of $US110 trillion in assets under professional management today, about 40 per cent have some sort of ESG consideration.

If green is now good according to global financial markets, how long will both parties back brown industries at the cost of rapid emissions reduction?

The support for Steggall’s bill suggests that, outside Parliament, the desire for rapid reductions is broad. It has been backed not just by groups such as the Clean Energy Council – which represents Australia’s renewable energy industry – but by the Australian Industry Group, the Business Council of Australia, the Planning Institute of Australia and the Property Council of Australia.

What's a 'just transition' and can you switch to green energy without sacking coal workers? 
This attitude is reflected in polls, such as that conducted by the Lowy Institute in 2019 which found that six in 10 Australians believed global warming is “a serious and pressing problem” about which “we should begin taking steps now even if this involves significant costs”.       

Despite this, both major parties remain home to supporters of old industries that scientists – and markets – believe must be abandoned.

Announcing a new climate spokesman in Chris Bowen, Labor plans to focus on the message that addressing climate change will prove to be a boon rather than a burden to the economy. It is betting that this message will be echoed in the markets too.

It is hoping that the functional reality – which is to say the political reality – and the scientific reality have finally converged. 

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Engineers Have Built Machines To Scrub CO₂ From The Air. But Will It Halt Climate Change?

The Conversation

Climeworks




Author
is Professor & ARC Future Fellow, University of Sydney. 
On Wednesday last week, the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere was measured at at 415 parts per million (ppm). The level is the highest in human history, and is growing each year.

Amid all the focus on emissions reduction, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) says it will not be enough to avoid dangerous levels of global warming. The world must actively remove historical CO₂ already in the atmosphere - a process often described as “negative emissions”.

CO₂ removal can be done in two ways. The first is by enhancing carbon storage in natural ecosystems, such as planting more forests or storing more carbon in soil. The second is by using direct air capture (DAC) technology that strips CO₂ from the ambient air, then either stores it underground or turns it into products.

US research published last week suggested global warming could be slowed with an emergency deployment of a fleet of “CO₂ scrubbers” using DAC technology. However a wartime level of funding from government and business would be needed. So is direct air capture worth the time and money?

Direct air capture of CO2 will be needed to address climate change. Shutterstock

What’s DAC all about?

Direct air capture refers to any mechanical system capturing CO₂ from the atmosphere. Plants operating today use a liquid solvent or solid sorbent to separate CO₂ from other gases.

Swiss company Climeworks operates 15 direct air capture machines across Europe, comprising the world’s first commercial DAC system. The operation is powered by renewable geothermal energy or energy produced by burning waste.

The machines use a fan to draw air into a “collector”, inside which a selective filter captures CO₂. Once the filter is full, the collector is closed and the CO₂ is sequestered underground.

Canadian company Carbon Engineering uses giant fans to pull air into a tower-like structure. The air passes over a potassium hydroxide solution which chemically binds to the CO₂ molecules, and removes them from the air. The CO₂ is then concentrated, purified and compressed.

Captured CO₂ can be injected into the ground to extract oil, in some cases helping to counteract the emissions produced by burning the oil.

The proponents of the Climeworks and Carbon Engineering technology say their projects are set for large-scale investment and deployment in coming years. Globally, the potential market value of DAC technology could reach US$100bn by 2030, on some estimates.

Artist impression of a DAC facility to be built in the US state of Texas. If built, it would be the largest of its kind in the world. Carbon Engineering

Big challenges ahead

Direct air capture faces many hurdles and challenges before it can make a real dent in climate change.

DAC technology is currently expensive, relative to many alternative ways of capturing CO₂, but is expected to become cheaper as the technology scales up. The economic feasibility will be helped by the recent emergence of new carbon markets where negative emissions can be traded.

DAC machines process an enormous volume of air, and as such are very energy-intensive. In fact, research has suggested direct air capture machines could use a quarter of global energy in 2100. However new DAC methods being developed could cut the technology’s energy use.

While the challenges to direct air capture are great, the technology uses less land and water than other negative emissions technologies such as planting forests or storing CO₂ in soils or oceans.

DAC technology is also increasingly gaining the backing of big business. Microsoft, for example, last year included the technology in its carbon negative plan.

Direct air capture is touted as a way to offset emissions from industry and elsewhere. Shutterstock

Opportunities for Australia

Australia is uniquely positioned to be a world leader in direct air capture. It boasts large areas of land not suitable for growing crops. It has ample sunlight, meaning there is great potential to host DAC facilities powered by solar energy. Australia also has some of the world’s best sites in which to “sequester” or store carbon in underground reservoirs.

Direct air capture is a relatively new concept in Australia. Australian company Southern Green Gas, as well as the CSIRO, are developing solar-powered DAC technologies. The SGG project, with which I am involved, involves modular units potentially deployed in large numbers, including close to sites where captured CO₂ can be used in oil recovery or permanently stored.

If DAC technology can overcome its hurdles, the benefits will extend beyond tackling climate change. It would create a new manufacturing sector and potentially re-employ workers displaced by the decline of fossil fuels.

Australia has ample sunlight and plenty of non-arable land where DAC facilities could be built. Shutterstock

Looking ahead

The urgency of removing CO₂ from the atmosphere seems like an enormous challenge. But not acting will bring far greater challenges: more climate and weather extremes, irreversible damage to biodiversity and ecosystems, species extinction and threats to health, food, water and economic growth.

DAC technology undoubtedly faces stiff headwinds. But with the right policy incentives and market drivers, it may be one of a suite of measures that start reversing climate change.

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