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The Centre for Policy Development
The Road from Copenhagen Thinking Points

Dear Bernard,

Welcome to our special Road from Copenhagen edition of Thinking Points - where CPD looks at the future of climate policy in light of what was (and wasn't) achieved at the climate talks dubbed 'the most important meeting of our lives'. 

Copenhagen has delivered a non-binding agreement more disappointing than the pessimists amongst us could have predicted. While British Prime Minister Gordon Brown darkly muttered, 'There is no Plan B', the idea that Copenhagen was our last chance to act is a dangerous proposition for those who continue to push for policy based on the latest climate science. Both in Australia and at the talks, we have seen inadequate targets and policies that do not take heed of recent scientific observations - for example, that the rate of ocean acidification,  the thawing of the permafrost and the melting of Arctic sea ice are all happening faster than the IPCC (International Panel on Climate Change) predicted.

As the ink dries on the COP15 agreement and delegates board their planes home, we ask CPD contributors to look at how we might move beyond posturing to real progress. Does Copenhagen represent one small step on a very long road to avoiding a climate disaster? What global and national actions do we need to take on climate change in 2010? And when - and how - will the politics catch up with the reality?
 

In this edition of Thinking Points:

On the ground at Copenhagen, join our correspondents and find out what they witnessed unfold at the COP15 talks.

  • Rupert Posner from The Climate Group looks beyond the disappointments and debacles of the global conference to see the glass half full.
  • Peter Colley, national research director at the CFMEU, a union whose members will be at the frontline of any transition to a carbon-neutral economy, was in Copenhagen as part of a four person CFMEU delegation, and as one of about 316 union representatives.
With an eye on the talks from Australia, CPD thinkers and other commentators are asking what Copenhagen means for our political landscape and local action on climate change.
  • Miriam Lyons, CPD's Executive Director, looks at the role of faith and visions of change in moving beyond our current impasse.
  • CPD Fellow, Ben Eltham asks if the world is really ready to face up to the full challenge of climate change? Right now, he writes, you'd have to say no.
  • Mark Diesendorf, Deputy Director of the Institute of Environmental Studies, UNSW exposes the gap between rhetoric and reality in the Rudd Government's climate change policies.
  • Paul Gilding, climate activist and writer, revisits a paper he co-wrote with Jorgen Randers, pointing out that behind the drone of the day to day political negotiations, what we are facing is nothing short of a global emergency. He contends it's not too late (yet!) - if we have the political will to mobilise resources and human ingenuity - to keep temperatures below a 1oC rise by reducing CO2 concentrations below 350ppm.
And reflecting on the deeper implications of responding to climate change for the way we organise our society, we have today published an essay on Cooperation, Community & Climate Change by Rob Salter that explains why better relationships are the key to successful action on climate change. Read it online or download the pdf here.

I hope you enjoy this bumper Copenhagen edition of Thinking Points, and look forward to working with you to make sustainable economic ideas matter in 2010.

All the best for the holidays,

Miriam Lyons and
the team at the Centre for Policy Development

P.S. Please forward this on to a friend to read over summer and ask them to also subscribe to get great ideas in their inbox in 2010.

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We want your ideas too. Click through to the CPD website at the bottom of each article and tell us what you think. Or you can write for CPD.


Rupert Posner | Hope shifts to a treaty in 2010

Copenhagen is finally over. So, did it achieve what we expected?

There had been so much hype leading up to it and expectations were high. It attracted record attendances including well over 100 heads of state – and we thought that surely this boded well for a strong outcome for the environment. But good attendance didn’t necessarily mean a good outcome.

Indeed, there were so many people attending COP 15 that the organisation of the conference really became a bit of a farce. Delegates, including scientists, had to wait in queues for up to 10 hours in freezing conditions simply to get their accreditation to enter the conference centre. Once they finally did, organisers simply changed the rules and locked them out; meaning that many who had attended COPs for years couldn’t even participate. Many simply changed their tickets and flew home, wasting time and sometimes thousands of dollars.

But success isn’t about the frustrated tens of thousands, it is about what changes will happen and whether greenhouse gas emissions will finally peak and decline to a safe level.
I, like many others who believe we need to swiftly restructure our economy, am disappointed with the outcome. It has not put us on the path the scientists tell us we must embark on. It is clear that most political leaders do not yet fully realise that taking action is not only necessary, but that if they act swiftly, it will also be good for their economy and their citizens. If they did, they would act without the precondition of others doing the same.

But the glass is just as much half full as it is half empty. Last week we had historic participation by world leaders and the strongest recognition yet that we need to take action. We also have the clearest indication that a global agreement might happen. We need to get over the hurt of not getting all we wanted and make sure that 2010 is the year we deliver the ratifiable treaty the planet so desperately needs.

Comment online

Peter Colley | Just Transition not yet a priority at Copenhagen

Participation by trade unions in international climate negotiations has grown from very little (around 13 people at Kyoto in 1997) to over 300 people in Copenhagen for COP15 (the fifteenth Conference of the Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change) - still very small relative to environmental and business NGOs.

Even with over 300 delegates from unions present, it’s hard to make a difference among some 25,000 NGOs - covering the spectrum from big business to international green groups and even Girl Guide Associations. There’s an argument that the COP process has grown too unwieldy to achieve the necessary rate of progress in making and implementing decisions on climate change. UN forums are themselves unwieldy, with over 190 nations present, and a reliance on consensus to make decisions. Throw in thousands of interest groups and NGOs using every trick in the book to affect the process, and progress is very, very difficult.

Trade unions argue that making the change to a low carbon society and economy is going to require huge transformations in which working people will be both the main mechanism for change and among the most affected by the change. If addressing climate change is seen simply as the application of technologies and of economic tools (e.g. taxes and emissions charges) it will fail, because it won’t mobilise workers and communities to embrace and implement the massive changes required. 

The trade unions present in Copenhagen vary widely in their understanding of the issues and the membership they represent. Heavy industry unions want to see their industries cleaned up, not shut down or relocated to countries without emissions reduction targets. White collar unions see more upside in new technologies and skills, but also see that there will be major social upheaval with rising energy and transport costs.

The CFMEU is keen to see progress on carbon capture and storage (CCS), as the necessary suite of technologies to clean up not only coal use, but also gas-fired power generation, iron and steel, cement making, and other heavy industries such as pharmaceuticals and chemicals, pulp and paper and food processing. All create large amounts of carbon dioxide. We are very concerned that big business and institutional investors are not willing to invest in CCS (or most renewables for that matter) unless governments guarantee their profits. When things get very risky, business and investors expect the public sector to shoulder the burden.

All unions agree on the need for a new climate treaty to include a 'Just Transition' – basing the restructuring that will occur on recognition of the fact that it is fundamentally a social process, in which the costs and benefits of change need to be shared and borne equitably. It may seem a simple and fair idea, but it has rarely happened in the past – the cost of most restructuring has been borne disproportionately by particular workforces and communities.

For heavy industry unions, Just Transition is about transforming our industries into low emission industries, not shutting them down.

Just Transition has been proposed in the negotiating texts in Copenhagen. But it is by no means certain that most developed or developing nations will support it. Equity and social justice seem to be regarded as a distraction by many nations and NGOs.

At Copenhagen everything is up for grabs, including our common future.

Comment online

 

Miriam Lyons | Difficult, but not diabolical

In October this year the UN named Tinker Bell its ‘Honorary Ambassador of Green’. A cynic might conclude that her appointment was sadly appropriate, given that a binding international agreement to replace Kyoto currently seems as elusive as Never-Neverland.

There’s something strangely fitting about treating JM Barrie’s green-eyed fairy as a metaphor for climate action. The fate of human civilisation now depends less on technical innovation than it does on trust: the level of trust that citizens of the world have in our scientists, our governments and each other to do the right thing. This means that defeatist rhetoric can do material damage. The naysayers and doomsdayers who disbelieve in the potential for individuals and their communities to act altruistically, or who dismiss science-based action as politically unfeasible, actually have the power to kill the climate action fairy. And those of us sitting on the sidelines chanting “I do believe in concerted international climate action based on the latest science, I do, I do!” won’t know if our efforts are making any difference until a decent agreement finally splutters into life.

Climate change is a problem which requires us to marshall the best of science and faith, simultaneously. But it’s hard to have faith without knowing what to have faith in - a vision of what a transition to a sustainable economy would look like in practice. This is why we need the work of people like Paul Gilding, whose ‘1 degree war’ describes a set of steps that could limit global warming to 1 degree, and Rob Salter, whose essay on ‘Cooperation, Community and Climate Change’, outlines the cultural shift involved in serious climate action, and the social benefits that will go with it. Thinking happy thoughts won’t be enough to make COP16 fly, but we do need a vision of the future that we can be happy with. This is why CPD is planning to spend 2010 researching options for sustainable industry policy and the measures needed to track whether such policies deliver genuine social and environmental progress.

Ben Eltham cites Ross Garnaut’s description of climate change as a "diabolical" policy problem, but just how diabolical is it? Across history and around the world people have laid down their lives to protect their families or to defend an ideal. While the Garnaut report’s recommendations were deemed too demanding by the Rudd Government, even its most challenging option would have barely made a dint in the lifestyles of most Australians.

As Peter Colley points out, a 'Just Transition' for the people who will be most affected by climate action is essential. We must also be careful not to focus so much of our attention and energy on the potential losers from the shift to a sustainable economy that we miss the enormous opportunities that come with it. Even the most fundamental and disruptive change presents opportunities for social and economic progress. In the US during the Second World War, up to half of the total economy was diverted towards military activity within a few years. Yet despite this massive transformation, and despite the fact that personal consumption was rationed, the economy was not devastated - quite the reverse. Wages grew 65% over the course of the war, company profits rose, GNP grew sharply, and unemployment fell. (See pages 227 and 252 of Climate Code Red)

And it’s not all about sacrifice. Buildings designed to be energy efficient through the use of natural light are more pleasant to work in. Cities designed around sustainable transport have cleaner air and healthier populations. Companies which put the planet before short-term profits can end up with a better bottom line than their resource-hungry competitors when costs go up. The New Economics Foundation’s ‘Happy Planet Index’ (which tracks self-reported life satisfaction, life expectancy, and economic sustainability) demonstrates that it is possible for a country to have a very high quality of life with vastly lower environmental impact than the Western average (Costa Rica is a standout example, with MailScanner has detected a possible fraud attempt from "cpd.us1.list-manage.com" claiming to be higher life expectancy than the US and an environmental footprint of 2.1, compared to the US’ 9.5).

Comment online


Ben Eltham | Act now or the planet pays later


Just how serious is climate change? Ross Garnaut called it one of the most "diabolical" policy challenges ever faced by humanity – and he's right, of course.

“The costs of doing something about it come early,” he

told the ABC's Mark Colvin last week “The benefits come later.”

“It's hard also because this problem requires cooperation across countries of a more complex kind than the human species has ever managed before,” he continued. “There's no precedent.”

History suggests that humanity does not cope well with the cognitive challenges of climate change. The changes occurring in the earth's atmosphere may be astonishingly rapid on a geological time-scale, but in political terms they're happening slowly. After all, the very worst consequences won't be felt until long after current governments have left office and most of the negotiators at Copenhagen are dead.

Because climate change is so big, it challenges the way we see the political landscape. In the 1970s and 1980s, there was a level of bipartisan understanding of climate science; Margaret Thatcher (a former industrial chemist) was a famous early supporter of action on climate change. But in the 1990s, particularly in the US, the influence of the culture wars saw many on the right begin to attack climate science in overtly political terms, as a trope of the supposedly extreme left-wing ideology of environmentalism. Subsequently, conservative politicians in the US, Canada and Australia opted to abandon any serious commitment to the rational observation of scientific evidence, and instead embraced the seductions of junk science and climate denialism. The end result of this trend was the recent split in the Liberal Party over climate change.

Even for decision-makers who do believe that the world is warming and that this is a problem, there are utterly rational motives for countries to stall, cheat and prevaricate at Copenhagen. This is in fact exactly what John Howard's government did at Kyoto in 1997: after negotiating a generous carbon emissions target by threatening to pull out at the last minute, the Howard Government then went back on the deal, refusing to even ratify the agreement. To those who support action on climate change, it was a betrayal. The hard-heads in Howard's cabinet portrayed it as sensible hard bargaining in the national interest.

This disconnect between national and global interests is one insight of the branch of mathematical logic known as game theory. Game theory is often used to model political and strategic situations, and when applied to the climate change policy challenge, it helps us understand why international cooperation is so difficult.

From a game theory perspective, a strong agreement on cutting emissions at Copenhagen was always going to be highly unlikely. The only way global emissions can be reduced effectively is if the majority of the world's big polluting nations sign up. But in such a process, there are huge temptations for countries to refuse to participate, to cheat, or to insist that they shouldn't commit until everyone else does (this is the Liberal Party position in Australia). This is the very heart of the conundrum.

One of the world's best known game theorists is Bruce Bueno de Mesquita.

He predicted that Copenhagen would be "a bust", arguing that "today's emerging powerhouses like Brazil, India, and China simply won't stand for serious curbs on their emissions, and the pro-regulation crowd in the United States and Europe won't be strong enough to force their hands."

If that is the case, then we may well be locked into a world four, five or perhaps six degrees warmer than now: a calamity for our children — and especially our grandchildren.

Another influential analyst,

Australian scientist Barry Brook, believes that action will eventually be taken – but only after climate change becomes a looming emergency obvious to all. He points out that under the existential threat of invasion in the Second World War, many countries nationalised major sectors of their economies and re-tooled their entire industrial base to armaments production in a matter of a few years (a very costly response, although one that had a positive effect on employment and GDP).

Tragically, we may see the worst of all possible outcomes: catastrophic climate change, wrenching industrial transformation and perhaps even climate-caused wars. Gwynne Dyer's chilling book

Climate Wars models the possible threats to international stability posed by climate change, and predicts that wars will be fought in the 21st century over issues like unilateral climate engineering (for existence, risky and speculative climate-cooling sulfur dioxide injections into the upper atmosphere).

Even if the world eventually adopts some kind of concerted action to cut greenhouse gas emissions, dangerous climate change is now locked in. The challenge for all of us – governments, scientists, industrialists and citizens – is to finally face up to the reality in all its frightening uncertainty and complexity.

It's going to be a hotter, drier, scarier, more drought-prone and more fire-prone future. Get used to it.

Comment onlineRead more of Ben Eltham's analysis of Copenhagen and climate policy at New Matilda.

  

Mark Diesendorf | The Australian Government is undermining Climate Action


The Australian government is posing as an active proponent of climate action both at Copenhagen and at home. But, behind the fine words, symbolic gestures and (mostly unfulfilled) 2007 election promises, its actual strategies and policies are serving the Greenhouse Mafia, that is, the vested interests in coal, oil, centralised electricity generation, aluminium, steel, cement, motor vehicles, forestry and agriculture.

In Copenhagen the government’s negotiators advocated rule changes entailing that land use changes that produce carbon pollution are not counted, while land-based carbon sinks are. This would mean that most of Australia's reduction targets could be met through changes to agricultural practices rather than reductions in fossil fuel use.

At home the government has been trying to push through Parliament an emissions trading scheme (ETS) that would lock-in dirty coal-fired power stations and an expansion of emissions-intensive trade-exposed (EITE) industries (notably aluminium) for at least another decade, while rewarding these greenhouse-intensive industries with billions of dollars of tax-payers’ money. This scheme is unlikely to achieve any emission reductions in Australia, since the few greenhouse polluters that would have to purchase emission permits could buy cheap offsets overseas from schemes of dubious effectiveness.

With the support of the Coalition, the government has succeeded in passing through Parliament an expanded Renewable Energy Target (RET) designed in such a way that it cannot achieve its stated goal of 20% renewable electricity by 2020. This is because the RET allows solar and electric heat pump hot water, and

‘phantom’ (non-existent) residential solar electricity systems created under the Solar Credits Scheme, to count towards the target. The immediate result has been a collapse in the price of Renewable Energy Certificates (which provide a subsidy for residential renewable electricity and hot water) and a RET that in effect squeezes out large-scale renewable electricity. Already the manufacturers of wind turbine components, such as Keppel Prince, are on the point of laying off hundreds of workers, and the bio-electricity power stations at Condong and Broadwater are heading for bankruptcy.

The solutions to these problems should be obvious:

• Either reform the ETS by strengthening the target, requiring all emission permits to be auctioned and disallowing overseas offsets, or replace the ETS with a carbon tax with border tax adjustments for EITE industries.
• Either reform the RET to become a genuine renewable electricity target, by removing solar and heat pump hot water and phantom solar electric systems from it, or replace it with national gross feed-in tariffs for renewable electricity systems of all types and scales.
• Even if the RET is reformed as suggested here, it would only assist wind, bio-electricity and residential solar electricity. National feed-in tariffs are still needed for the more expensive renewable electricity sources of high potential, such as large-scale solar and geothermal power.
• Solar hot water should be assisted by state governments, by removing all local government requirements for planning permission for these systems.
• Sources and sinks of emissions from land-use change should be accounted for separately from fossil fuel emissions, which can be measured accurately.

 Comment online

 

Paul Gilding | Time to prepare for the one degree war


While the media and political worlds are focused on Copenhagen as 'the most important meeting in history', the science tells us a very different story. The reality is that there is nothing on the table in Copenhagen that would get us remotely to where the science tells us we have to be to stabilise the global climate. This actually makes Copenhagen just a training exercise. Amidst the noise of the day-to-day debates, we have lost sight of the simple logic of the advice coming from the world’s top climate scientists. Despite the uncertainties in the details, the science carries one underlying message from which we can draw only one rational conclusion: it is time to declare a global emergency and mobilise all available resources, political will and human ingenuity towards one task – to reduce the risk of catastrophic climate change to an acceptable level.

The real action will begin when the world ends its denial and accepts that we need to bring CO2 concentrations below 350ppm, and that means eliminating net greenhouse gas emissions from the economy, probably in about 20 years. The objective will then be to ensure the global temperature is stabilised at around 1 degree above pre-industrial levels. This will require a war-like mobilisation across the global economy.

We are completely capable of such a response, but only when we decide that failing to do so puts the future of global civilisation at risk – which it does. Then remarkable things will happen. We're not ready yet, but we soon will be. In the meantime observe the training exercise for a taste of what's to come.

Professor Jorgen Randers and I have recently released a paper detailing our response to this conclusion. ‘The One Degree War Plan’ began to take form a few years ago, the product of a challenging conversation between Jorgen and myself. Jorgen, a lifelong advocate for action on sustainability, rose to prominence in 1972 as one of the original authors of the Club of Rome’s famous 'Limits to Growth', the bestselling environmental book of all time – over 30 million copies in 37 different languages.

Jorgen and I had both accepted the scientific reality and were discussing the question it posed – what would a rational response to the climate science look like? If you stripped away all the politics and debate and took a fresh look, what would be the logical action plan?

In 2008, after many more such conversations, we decided that we needed to articulate our answer to that question, in detail and on paper.

We started by considering what the science meant, in human terms. This was the simple part, as the peer-reviewed climate science is very clear on the level of risk. There is a high degree of certainty that humanity will face severe disruption to the global economy and society, with widespread economic damage, geopolitical instability and human suffering. Perhaps more importantly, there is a lower but still significant risk of catastrophic collapse – of tipping points being passed that would lead to the effective collapse of our current civilisation and economy. Once this was understood, we could begin to consider what a logical response to this level of risk would be.

But before we got there, we made another initial but fundamental conclusion: that the momentum in the climate system is now so great that the world will, before long, wake up to a threat of this magnitude. It will recognise that despite the remaining uncertainties, we cannot afford to risk the collapse of the global economy and civilisation. Thus an appropriate response – one that recognises the science and the true scale of the risk – will occur.

When this emergency response is designed, we concluded that it would need to aim to bring warming below 1 degree, and therefore, CO2 concentrations below 350ppm. Anything less would leave civilisation at too great a risk of catastrophe, and would therefore be irrational. Our remaining task was then to develop a plan of action that was capable of achieving this outcome.

This paper is the result. It has taken over a year of development and research, including considerable feedback from colleagues and modelling by C-Roads, the climate simulator developed by MIT, the Sustainability Institute and Ventana Systems.

We were actually surprised by the outcome of our work, which showed that not only is One Degree and 350ppm possible, it is surprisingly achievable and practical. It certainly requires that we act very soon and that we act with a level of determination and commitment not seen since WWII, but it can be achieved. In recognition of this comparison, we called our paper The One Degree War Plan. It is a plan that shows what humanity can achieve – and we believe will achieve – when it develops a rational response to the climate threat.

We are releasing our paper for public reaction and comment, because we recognise that this is not an intellectual exercise. A response like the One Degree War Plan, if it is to be implemented, is going to require years of development by global experts across many disciplines. It will also require strong public support globally if our political leaders are to have the courage to adopt such an approach. This in turn will only happen if many millions of people engage and decide that, in the end, we are a rational species and this is the way forward we consciously choose to take.

Building a robust plan and the support to implement it is of course an enormous task. So we think now is a good time to start. We encourage you to consider this paper, to circulate it amongst your networks and to help us together build the courage we need to face reality.

Comment online

Download Paul Gilding and Jorgen Randers

'The One Degree War Plan' here

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Rob Salter | Cooperation, Community and Climate Change

The failure of the world’s governments to agree on firm commitments to adequately address the dire threat posed by climate change means that a major rethink is necessary, and it may require basic changes to the way we live – including in unexpected areas of our lives.

In a new paper, MailScanner has detected a possible fraud attempt from "cpd.us1.list-manage.com" claiming to be Cooperation, Community & Climate Change, Robert Salter argues that better relationships are the key to successful action on climate change. As whole societies, we cannot respond adequately to the enormous challenge the climate change threat poses until we achieve greater internal cohesion, and until we focus less on being wealthier and more on being happier. He contends that progress toward both goals requires us to build richer, more effective relationships in all areas of our lives.

The author outlines a range of practical measures that would allow us to simultaneously work towards these goals while also taking the technical steps necessary to achieve a low-carbon future. They entail moving toward societies in which there is:

  • greater equality
  • stronger communities with more self-reliant local economies
  • more satisfying workplaces, with staff having a greater share in decision-making and ownership
  • more effective efforts to include the currently marginalised as fully participating members of society
  • new approaches to education, town-planning, transport policy and the role of local organisations that enhance community and cooperation.


The proposals are bold, but Robert Salter argues that anything less risks a more-of-the-same response to the massive threat we face.

Read the full essay and comment online.

READ more Thinking Points online here

CPD IN THE NEWS | Ideas that Matter

As our Sustainable Economy Program gets underway, we're also continuing our work to make other good ideas matter. Here are CPD thinkers' ideas that have been attracting attention lately:

- Listen to Ben Eltham as he joins a panel discussion on Radio National pondering the future of cultural policy in Australia.

- Stephen Collins' Upgrading Democracy article 'Culture in the new order' is reproduced as part of his chapter for the new Gov2.0 book State of the E-Union

- Jennifer Doggett on ABC Australia Talks discusses what GP Super clinics can achieve and how they will improve healthcare.

- Miriam Lyons and Ben Eltham support automatic enrolment and suggest ways in which we can celebrate election days in The Sydney Morning Herald

You'll find more CPD media coverage here.
 

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