Andy Rowell, 21 November 2005
 Later
this month an estimated 10,000 people from over 180 countries will
descend on the old Canadian city of Montreal for an historic United
Nations meeting on climate change. It will be the first official
meeting since the legally-binding Kyoto Protocol was ratified in
February this year. The Protocol is an internationally-binding policy
that sets out targets to stabilize and reduce the greenhouse gases that
cause climate change.
The task facing the delegates is daunting. Politicians and
scientists argue that the threat posed by climate change is far greater
than international terrorism. Every day evidence mounts indicating
climate change is happening and is leading to more violent and extreme
weather, increased water shortages and unprecedented loss of ice in the
Arctic.
Scientists tell us we have to
reduce emissions of greenhouse gases by some 60 to 80 per cent if we
are to avoid a climate catastrophe that could affect billions of
people. As the majority of emissions come from the burning of fossil
fuels – oil, gas and coal - it is these we need to reduce or conserve.
We need to rapidly expand the use of renewable energy such as wind,
solar and biomass, they say.
Delegates in Montreal will be plotting the second stage of the Kyoto process. They hope to sign an agreement that will include key developing nations such as China and India that are not currently bound by the existing Protocol and whose rapidly expanding economies are a source of growing pollution. They will also be looking at setting new targets for reducing emissions after 2012, when the first agreed deadline expires.
It will not be easy to come to any agreement. The largest polluter of them all – the United States - has rejected the Kyoto Protocol outright. Australia refuses to sign up until China and India
are forced to sign as well. There is also another problem. Although we
know we must reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, in the affluent West
our use of energy continues to soar and therefore our emissions
increase.
Just fifteen per cent of the world’s population
consumes nearly two-thirds of the electricity. In contrast, 41 per cent
of the world’s population has access to only 6 per cent of the energy.
The reality is that the so-called first-world is addicted to using
energy– and all the trappings of an oil addicted lifestyle: the cars
(which are getting bigger); the shops; the cheap flights; the
televisions; the fridges; the electricity on tap.
No politician in the Western world
wants to tell their voters to stop driving or flying. They know the
problem but refuse to act. That is why George Bush and Tony Blair
continue to be criticized for their inaction on climate. Just last week, Blair was criticized by Britain’s three main environmental groups. The pressure group Greenpeace blockaded the entrance to his official residence at Downing Street
with tonnes of coal to protest at Blair’s failure on climate change.
“Blair’s burning more coal than ever, our CO2 emissions have gone up,
he’s set to miss his own global warming targets and now it seems he's
trying to kill off the Kyoto Protocol” said Stephen Tindale, the head
of Greenpeace.
A second environmental organization, Friends of the Earth, said the Prime Minister's credibility on climate change was “evaporating fast." The third, the World Wide Fund for Nature,
argued that Blair’s negotiating position on climate had become
indiscernible from that of the biggest climate criminal of them all: US
President George W Bush." Blair and Bush are climate criminals
together.
The West’s failure to act offers a real
opportunity for others to take the lead. Would it not be the ultimate
irony that the countries with the most oil and gas – the Middle East
– took the lead in arguing for a reduction in oil and gas and a
reduction in greenhouse gases? Whilst on the surface this may seem
completely improbable, a new scientific study shows just why it could
just make sense.
A ground-breaking report has just been published by the German Aerospace Centre
that was commissioned by the German Federal Ministry for the
Environment. The scientists looked at different scenarios for energy in
what they called they called the MENA region that stands for the “Middle East and North Africa."
The German scientists note that in the
MENA region "economic and social development is the first priority" and
that because of this "climate protection only has an ancillary role."
Only a few countries in the region have ratified Kyoto, although none from OPEC as this would be “detriment to their primary market interest."
In theory the region is the heart of the problem. The Middle East sits on over 61 per cent of the world’s oil reserves and 40 per cent of the world’s gas reserves. These
reserves are vital to their economies. However, when all this oil and
gas is burnt it will contribute to climate change. But just as the Middle East
is part of the problem, the German scientists argue it is also part of
the solution, because of its vast reserves of renewable energy. This is
energy that is not finite and not polluting. Therefore it does not
cause climate change.
The potential for solar energy is absolutely
staggering, the scientists argue. “By far the biggest resource in MENA”
they conclude “is solar radiance, with a potential that is several
orders of magnitude larger than the total world electricity demand.” But there is also wind energy which is already a major resource in Egypt and Oman whilst geothermal power is available in Turkey, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the Yemen.
You could argue that with so much oil
and gas under their feet, it would be economic suicide for Middle
Eastern countries to advocate reducing the use of fossil fuels. In the
short-term this may be so, but in the longer term it makes economic and
environmental sense.
What is stopping a transition to renewable energy is it is much cheaper to carry on producing oil and gas in the short-term. Solar
cannot compete with oil. To change to renewable energy needs huge
financial investments as well as the huge political will it would need
for Middle Eastern governments to break the yoke of fossil fuel
dependence.
The German scientists calculate that it
would cost a staggering US$75 billion to make renewable energy break
even with fossil fuels before 2020. But while that is a vast sum of
money, the Germans point out two things: Firstly this is the kind of
money that would be spent developing any kind of comprehensive nuclear
programme. Secondly and more importantly, they calculate that after
2020 a shift in renewables would save the region US$ 250 billion. They
say that this is a conservative estimate and the more the oil price
rises the more money the region could in theory save. So you spend US$75 billion to save yourself US$250 billion: a net saving of US$175 billion. How
is this so? The scientists have costed two future scenarios for MENA:
one will be “business-as-usual” for energy that will lead to
significant problems: fossil fuels will get scarce, their price will
increase, water will become even scarcer and there will be more
conflict and more insecurity. This conflict will impact on economic
growth which will be reduced. Added to this will be the impacts from
climate change like desertification, losses of arable land and rare but
extreme flooding. All this will mean that the region will become
increasingly reliant on food imports. It is a costly future. In contrast a radical shift to renewable energy
will reduce the cost of energy, reduce conflict, help conserve water,
and create the economic stability for development. It will create
energy and water security, they conclude. It is a much cheaper future.
Which path will the Middle East
choose? One is easy for the leaders because they have to do nothing.
One is hard, but the rewards will be rich. It is a tough choice but one
that must be made today for tomorrow will be too late. It will take
years for any changes to take place. Within ten years the groundwater
resources that feed cities such as the capital of Yemen,
Sana’a, may reach a point where they are bone dry. Energy intensive
fossil fuel desalination plants will not give affordable water.
Renewable energy could though.
We know the United States will not act at Montreal. The European Union countries will talk tough, but end up arguing internally. China and India will drag their feet too. So would it not be amazing if the Middle Eastern countries went to Montreal
and demanded a radical shift to renewable energy. They can save the
planet by simply leaving the oil and gas where it is: underground.
Leaving it to rest in peace. Yes, they have the most to loose by
leaving the oil and gas there, but they also have the most to gain.
The report can be accessed here.
|