Climate: is the US-China announcement historic? Not really

15/11/2014
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An unheard of agreement. Seen by some as historic, taking the words of Barack Obama and not putting them into perspective. This Wednesday 12 November, the media and commentators welcomed almost unanimously the joint US-China announcement. But what is it really?
 
The facts: this Wednesday, Barack Obama and Xi Jinping announced their targets for cuts to their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. The US announced a 26-28% reduction by 2025 compared to 2005 levels. While China envisages a peak in its GHG emissions around 2030, or if possible before.
 
Are these announcements really so unheard of?
 
At the Ban Ki-moon Summit in New York this September 23, Zhang Gaoli, first vice-minister of China, had already announced that his government already wanted to peak its emissions as soon as possible and then reduce them. Furthermore, China had already announced its intention to reduce its carbon intensity (GHG emissions per unit of GDP) of its economy by 40-45% between now and 2020 in relation to 2005. Only the rather distant date of reaching it by 2030 is new. On their side, the US and Barack Obama had already announced its goals for 2020, announcing an emissions reduction of 17% based on 2005 levels. A pledge for 2025 is therefore new.
 
Are these announcements historic?
 
If China's emissions only peak in 2030, that means they will continue to rise until then. Despite a probable significant reduction in the carbon intensity of the Chinese economy in the coming years, Chinese leaders have just announced that they will continue to break yearly GHG emissions records for the next 15 years. In one sense, China's announcement is effectively historic. While it must be pointed out that the US has established its emissions directions based on a 2005 level. That's the highest ever year of US emissions, with almost 7200 Mt CO2e. Compared to 1990 levels – the year used as the international benchmark – the US targets nothing if not modest. They equal an annual reduction of -0.43%. Historic ?
 
Are these announcements up to the challenge?
 
The synthesis of IPCC report published on 2 November this year underlines what's needed. To avoid global warming beyond 2 degrees Celsius before the end of the century, we must not go beyond a concentration of 450 parts per million (ppm) of GHGs in the atmosphere. To do that, global emissions must be reduced by 40-70% by 2050, in relation to 2010, and lead to «almost zero» emissions from here to 2100. According to the IPCC, emissions need to peak and decline thereafter as quickly as possible, before 2020 would be better, inviting the biggest emitting countries and those most able to take action, to significantly reduce their emissions by 2020.
 
The US and China represent almost half of global emissions (around 45%). Their emissions reductions are therefore crucial. Regarding their far more important historical responsibility, the US must, as a minimum, like the European Union, reduce its emissions by at least 80% by 2050. Assuming they deliver their 2025 commitments, that means they will need to reduce their emissions by almost 5% per year between 2025 and 2050, around 10 times their commitments up to 2025. Put another way, the US will delay the majority of its efforts until after 2025. On the side of the Chinese, all of their emissions reductions are delayed until 2030. Therefore neither the US nor China are meeting what's demanded by the IPCC.
 
How to interpret these announcements?
 
Much more than actual numbers committed, the joint announcement from the USA and China must be interpreted in terms of what it means geopolitically. The announcement has been made outside any international negotiation, thus marginalizing and delegitimizing these. If the two world powers can make agreement on the side, what is left to negotiate for the 194 other countries in terms of emissions reductions? More importantly, the USA have given themselves a 2025 objective, when international negotiations invite states to use objectives for 2030. This announcement simply means that neither the USA nor China will accept imposed objectives towards the struggle against climate chaos. Neither by the UN, nor by other countries, nor by what the science demands.
 
This announcement clearly expresses that China and the US's engagements around the question of the climate crisis are only based on their national situations as well as the geopolitical equilibrium between the two powers, and not on any shared planetary efforts. None of the two powers wishes to commit in any way that is appropriate to the scale of the problem, especially not unilaterally. The USA and China have thus just buried the struggle against climate chaos in the depths of international geopolitics. By presenting their joint announcement in a very positive way, the American and Chinese diplomacy have de facto frozen international negotiations in quasi-generalized global inaction. Any kind of constraining agreement – which the USA and China do not want – that would be just and appropriate to the scale of what is at stake at the 2015 UN conference in Paris, is now simply an illusion.
 
What to do?
 
The NGOs, ecological and social movements, citizens, commentators and opinion makers now have two options. Either to go along with the language communicated by American and Chinese diplomacy, and to congratulate themselves on such an agreement, thus contributing to endorse the absence of ambition and the diplomatic freezing of negotiations around the world’s biggest powers. Or, it is possible to explain the situation, to work from the facts, to assess the commitments and to demystify what is absolutely not a historical agreement appropriate to the scale of what is at stake. We must not delude ourselves, it’s time to show some lucidity.
 
With such limited commitments, the USA and China are taking the risk, if (and only if) global public opinion grabs the issue, to find themselves on the front line of those responsible of the worsening of climate chaos. By rejecting leadership with regards to climate chaos, just like the European Union whose objectives are not appropriate either, they could find themselves isolated from international civil society. This is only if we overcome the trap of inaction set up by the American and Chinese diplomacies.
 
- Maxime Combes, member of Attac France and Aitec, involved in the project Echo des Alternatives (www.alter-echos.org)
 
@MaximCombes sur Twitter
 
(Thanks to Pascoe Sabibo, John Jordan & Isabelle Frémaux for the translation into English).
 
 
 
 
 
https://www.alainet.org/es/node/165510?language=es
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