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Le climat et les ressources naturelles. Quels enjeux pour 2010 ? Des émissions de gaz à effet de serre à réduire Brigitte Gloire - Oxfam – Bxl - 15 juin 2010 Table of content Climate injustice Domestic cuts as part of the Oxfam « climate Change” campaign Flexible mecanisms in the KP Problems in the supplementarity Problems in the additionality Problems in fulfilling the goal in sustainable development The winners Excluding criteria for CDMs Act now D’où proviennent les principales émissions de GES ? 1: Sealing the deal 3: Holding on to humanity 2: de-carbonising and making the model of growth / dvpt more sustainable La campagne d’oxfam se décline en 3 objectifs A FAIR, SAFE AND BINDING DEAL ASAP Campaign objectives Massive international resource transfers for developing countries additional to ODA + sustainable /accountable adaptation practices and policies, civil society participation, etc… Rich countries lead on equitable mitigation action - domestic action and financing for mitigation Global public mobilization to ensure political will through public pressure and expose special interest • Un modèle de dvpt (dans le Nord et le Sud) plus durable garantissant une diminution d’au moins 40 % (2020) et 80 à 95 % (2050) de gaz à effet de serre (GES) dans les pays de l’annexe 1 par rapport à 1990. Ces réductions doivent être majoritairement opérées chez nous (au moins pour 75 %) et pour le solde éventuel, basées sur des mécanismes flexibles (offsets) qui répondent au double objectif de DD dans les PVDs et d’efficacité ( additionalité des réductions). The Kyoto Protocol establishes three market-based "flexible mechanisms" to help Northern countries avoid or delay reducing their greenhouse gas emissions. • Emissions Trading. Northern countries failing to meet their emission targets can buy reductions from other Northern countries who lower emissions beyond their targets. • The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM). Northern countries can finance projects in the South aiming to mitigate climate change in return for credits which are banked and ultimately used to license continued pollution at home. • Joint Implementation. Northern countries can finance projects aiming to mitigate climate change in other Northern (often Eastern European) countries, receiving credits accordingly. • Corporations can use the carbon credits from these mechanisms to increase their emissions (those that restructure or go out of business will leave governments responsible for the associated carbon debt) CAP & TRADE Carbon offsets rationale • Carbon trade has been prefered to other regulatory instruments to counter CC because of ideological stance against regulation / interdiction and because of the assumption that it’s the most cost-effective way of achieving emissions reductions. Problems at different level • • • • • • • • • Ethical / Coherence / exemplarity Lack of developed countries credibility Rebund effect (in the tourism industry for example..) Displacement / delocalization of responsabilities Distraction / divertion from politicians to really support domestic GHG reductions Privatisation of the common (atmosphere) People displacement / landgrabbing Fraud (on VAT – resell – corruption) Effectiveness in GHG (additionality) and sustainable development in the south Problems in the supplementarity Despite clear references in COP & KP decision : • “….That the use of the mechanisms shall be supplemental to domestic action and domestic action shall thus constitute a significant element of the effort made by each Party included in Annex I to meet its quantified emission limitation and reduction commitments under Article 3, paragraph 1…”.decison 5 – COP 6 july 2001 • “…Decides that, for the second commitment period, additions to and subtractions from the assigned amount of a Party resulting from emissions trading and the project-based mechanisms shall not exceed 30 per cent of the quantified emission limitation and reduction commitment of that Party.” FCCC/KP/AWG/2010/6/Add.3 29 April 2010 Problems with additionality • Additionality : It refers to the issue of whether GHG reduction or sequestration in a JI or CDM project occurs over and above the baseline and constitutes a new reduction that would not have otherwise occurred in absence of the project. But from “a small fraction” (Haya B. berkeley) to only 60 % (öko-Institut Berlin) of CDM are additional. Problems in fulfilling the goal in sustainable development • From a large literature review, the conclusion is that the CDM has little or no effect on achieving sustainable developement in developing countries • Too few projects are being implemented in LDCs • Too few small scale projects in rural area or at the household level • Many projects / CERs represent marginal improvements (coal fired power plants with co-generation) or very cheap mitigation equipment (HFC / NxO….) But windfalls profits for fossil fuelintensive corporations • The ETS has turned the ‘polluter pays’ principle into a ‘polluter earns’ principle: The very industry sectors chiefly responsible for the climate crisis are being handed property rights to the atmosphere in the form of emissions permits that are worth billions of euros. Sandbag report ETS 2008 carbon fat cats Excluding criteria for CDMs • Nuclear • Large hydropower • Waste incineration • Carbon Capture and Storage • Coal • Unsustainable or chemical-treated biofuels • Unsustainable or chemical-treated biomass/biochar • Ocean fertilization and other forms of geoengineering • HFC production • Any project requiring resettlement or which deprives indigenous people of their customary use of land And above all • No inclusion of LULUCF project types beyond the existing afforestation / reforestation category and non inclusion of REDD in the CDM • No double accounting : No offsets budgets in climate financing No double-counting offsets as climate finance A1 fair share of global mitigation effort 40% below 1990 by 2020 Domestic Offreductions sets $100bn / year by 2020 for mitigation NA1 actions contingent on support Limit growth in emissions (equal to A1 reductions) Plus offsets Reductions take place <2ºC pathway requires: BOTH 40% below 1990 by 2020 in Annex I countries; AND a limit to the growth in emissions equal to Annex I reductions in Non-Annex I countries. Any offsetting must be in addition to the these reductions in Non-Annex I countries. Domestic positive action • • • • • • • • • • • • • Change in our model of growth - Support for ambitious domestic emissions reductions in industrialized countries + sustainable production & consumption patterns Subsidy shifting away from fossil fuels Tax shift where appropriate on carbon intensive activities – carbon tax Prohibition of highly GHG emitting activities / products / technology (HFC – big cars - coal plant…) Tax according the polluter payer principle Cap in the aviation / maritim sector Auctionning of AAUs Support for existing positive initiatives and legislation such as feed-in-tariff schemes and shift in electricity metering so tariffs increase rather than decrease with increasing usage Public investment in structural change and sustainable renewable Creative ways of engaging citizens in a debate on how to embark on a just transition away from fossil fuel addicted economies and towards zero-carbon economies: how to ensure just transition for all those whose jobs are tied to sunset fossil fuel industries Promotion of public discussion in plain language and go by ideological stance - a priori – around carbon trading Discussion of innovation rather than marginal numerical emission cuts Recognition that there are no popular politics and facing the fact that fossil fuel industries have to be sunset industries if we are to avoid climate chaos Act now • Priority to domestic cuts + regulatory mechanism + interdiction of unstainable / high carbon practices / products • Higher level of golden standarts and review of CDMs / ETS mechanism • No mix with climate finance for developing countries Main sources of informations • • • • • • www.unfccc.org www.oxfam.org www.climnet.org www.fern.org www.sinkswatch.org www.sandbag.org.uk