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A New Climate Economy: Sustainable transport systems at the centre of solutions Adj Prof. Johan Kuylenstierna Executive Director Stockholm Environment Institute Picture Source: Green Cargo Source: www.unep.org/pcfv/PDF/BAQAsia-Session1.pdf Distribution of surface freight transport Source: EU, Statistical Pocketbook, 2011 Discussion paper : 16th ACEA SAG Meeting, June 2011 Population and resources "The power of population is indefinitely greater than the power in the earth to produce subsistence for man". World Economic Forum: Global Risks 2011 “The past 20 years….substantial progress….. Most people…… healthier, live longer, are more educated and have more access to goods and services……… also in expanding people’s power to select leaders, influence public decisions and share knowledge. “ UNDP 2010. Human Development Report 2010. Summary. 20th Anniversary Edition. The Real Wealth of Nations: Pathways to Human Development. (UNDP) www.brookings.edu www2.warwick.ac.uk Mega cities 1950 Mega cities 2015 7,231,108,460 5 maj, 14:27:37 Källa: U.N. Population Division Source: U.N. Population Division KOF Index of Globalization Source: http://globalization.kof.ethz.ch/ World Merchandise Trade Volume By Major Product Group (1950-2009) Source: World Trade Statistics, 2011 Discussion paper : 16th ACEA SAG Meeting, June 2011 IPCC 5th Assessment Report Atmospheric CO2 Concentration Source: IPCC AR5 WG1 Fig. SPM.1b Warming in the climate system is unequivocal Source: IPCC AR5 WG1 Global CO2 per region From: www.pbl.nl Asia now accounts for ~46% of global emissions, but emissions per capita are still much lower than in North America GHG emissions, including land use change and forestry, by region, 2010 Million metric tonnes of CO2 equivalents 21,325 % of global GHG emissions per capita in total 2010, tCO2e per capita emissions Asia 46% 7,836 Europe 17% 7,502 North America 16% Latin America & the Caribbean 11% Africa 9% Oceania 2% 4,936 4,108 2 Per capita target for staying within 2 degrees of global temperature rise SOURCE: World Resources Institute CAIT Climate performance off track: next 10 years critical GHG emissions projections 10 year window to shift momentum Water scarcity Picture Source: Dr. Daniel Vermeer, Director, Global Water Partnerships, The Coca-Cola Company Southeast Asia, Baseline Water Stress and Power Plants Southeast Asia, Long Term Change in Water Stress and Power Plants (2025, IPCC Scenario A1B) Land resources increasingly strategic Source: FAO/SOLAW ” Global trade systems transmit and mediate a variety of impacts – the most prominent example of this is the global food trade system” (AR5 WGII, ch. 19.4) • Food import has dubbled in 10 years • Swedish export is dependent on Swedish import Exportandelar Export s om a ndel a v BNP, procent 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Källa: Världsbanken (WDI) År Hämtat: 2014-03-30 Sveri ge EU USA Source: Word Bank Transformations have happened in the past London December 1962: Photo by Fox Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images Cuyahoga River Fire Nov. 3, 1952. Cleveland Press Collection, Cleveland State University Library Times Magazine: A person "does not drown but decays". The world economy has more than doubled since 1980 and is expected to almost double by 2030 India Real GDP1 by region, 1980 – 2030 CAGR, 1980 - 2010 USD trillions 93 5 Rest of Asia Pacific Middle East and Africa Latin America 4% China OECD Asia Pacific Europe and Eurasia 10% 50 3 3% 3 4 2% 22 3 2 3% 1980 2010 1 Real GDP: Real GDP (constant 2005 US$). Mexico is included in Latin America. SOURCE: Projection from USDA(ERS), Actual data from World Bank 2030 North America The middle class could grow by 3 billion people by 2030 Global middle class Billions of people 4.88 3.25 0.11 0.23 0.31 0.32 0.68 1.85 Sub-Saharan Africa Middle East and North Africa Central and South America 3 billion 0.06 0.17 0.25 0.33 0.70 0.03 0.11 0.18 0.34 3.23 North America Europe 0.66 Asia-Pacific 0.53 1.74 2009 2020 2030 SOURCE: Resource Revolution, McKinsey Global Institute Atlanta and Barcelona: Similar GDP per capital, very different carbon productivity ATLANTA BARCELONA Atlanta’s built-up area Barcelona’s built-up area Population: 5.25 million Urban area: 4,280 km2 Carbon emissions: 7.5 tonnes CO2/ha/an (public+ private transport) Population: 5.33 million Urban area: 162 km2 Carbon emissions: 0.7 tonnes CO2/ha/an (public+ private transport) Infrastructure spend central to low-carbon growth Global investment; 2010 to 2030, $trillion, constant 2010 dollars 101.6 12.44 27.6 15.9 5.0 7.1 33.6 Source: OECD (2006, 2012), IEA (2012) There are still direct subsidies of up to $1.1 trillion per year on resources ESTIMATE Annual subsidies for key resources $ billion 1,020–1,120 40 200–300 Energy1 Agriculture2 Water Fisheries 1 Includes fossil-fuel consumption in power production; excludes subsidies on alternative energy. 2 Estimated as OECD plus Brazil, China, Russia, South Africa, and Ukraine; total support estimates less market price supports. 3 Excludes unpriced externalities such as carbon emissions and ecosystem impact. SOURCE: McKinsey analysis based on OECD; IEA; UNEP; Global Water Institute Total direct subsidies3 Tillväxt, primärenergi OECD/EIS, 2013 Coal is no longer the safe bet for energy security New coal consumption split by new imports and new domestic production Million metric tonnes of coal1 per year, % China (Scenario: Wood-Mac 2013 / Wang High Depletion) 3,200 India (Scenario: IESS level 2) New imports New domestic 975 72% 50% 1,482 18% 694 3% 261 82% 28% 97% 112 84% 2000-2005 2005-2012 2012-2030 46% 16% 2000-2005 50% 54% 2005-2012 2012-2030 1 All types, not adjusted for calorific content SOURCE: China projections: Wang et al. 2012; IEA WEO 2013; Wood-Mackenzie 2013. India projections: India Energy Security Scenarios; IEA WEO 2013 Energy efficiency IEA 11* total final energy consumption and energy services, 1974 vs. 2010 EJ Actual 2010 energy consumption … but would need to be 100% higher was 20% higher than in 1974… had energy efficiency not improved 160 Energy efficiency Other Coal Electricity Gas Oil 63 (80%) 16 (20%) 81 2 63 97 6 0 5 6 5 22 22 14 15 22 22 42 42 42 1974 energy use Actual 2010 energy use 2010 energy services+ 8 *Australia, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Sweden, the United Kingdom, the United States + Hypothetical 2010 energy supply required absent energy efficiency improvements since 1974 SOURCE: IEA Energy efficiency market report 2013 Without constant improvements since 1974 energy consumption would need to be 65% higher Low-carbon energy sources have steep learning curves Example: Wind power Wind turbines have evolved to have 100 times more power generation capabilities than 30 years ago Rotor diameter: 126m Rating: 7,500 kW Costs of power from different sources: Germany example of learning curve 180 Nuclear Gas CCGT Coal PC Onshore Wind Solar PV 160 140 LCOE ($/MWh) Hub height (m) 120 100 100m 3,000 kW 17m 75 kW 30m 300 kW 80 60 40 20 0 2013 1980-90 1990-95 2000-2005 2011 2018 2023 Year 2028 2033 Note: Carbon price and social cost of carbon and health care impacts are not included Business in the Anthropocene • • • • • Opportunities and Challenges! An increasingly connected world Demographic transitions – urban world Energy transition (supply to systems change) Value chains, new relationships: Supply chain, supply net, producer-user Natural resources – from land and water to rare earth Policy and innovation • Resource efficiency guiding star • Moving away from fossil fuel solutions • Economic and legal frameworks (subsidies, incentives, systems) • Infrastructure constraints (spatial planning) • Innovation – at all levels The Global Commission on the Economy and Climate http://newclimateeconomy.net THANK YOU Johan Kuylenstierna [email protected] Twitter: @JKuylenstierna www.sei-international.org