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Global Climate Change Negotiations: A Perspective on Intergenerational and Social Equity P.R. Shukla NORTH-SOUTH EQUITY: UNFCCC Article 3.1 “common but differentiated responsibilities” Article 3.2 Special attention and considerations for parties: “that would have to bear a disproportionate or abnormal burden under the Convention” “vulnerable to the adverse effects of climate change” Canada USA Australia Japan Former USSR EU12 Other Europe Latin America Other Asia China India Africa Carbon emissions per Capita (tC/cap) Carbon Emissions per Capita (1993) 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Historic CO2 and Methane Contribution 1800-1988 (%) Region Industrial CO2 33.2 Total CO2 29.7 CO2 + CH4 29.2 1 OECD North America 2 OECD Europe 26.1 16.6 16.4 3 Eastern Europe 5.5 4.8 4.7 4 Former USSR 14.1 12.5 12.4 5 Japan 3.7 2.3 2.3 6 Oceania 1.1 1.9 1.9 7 China 5.5 6.0 6.3 8 India 1.6 4.5 4.8 9 Other Asia 1.5 5.0 5.2 10 N. Africa & Mid-East 2.2 1.7 1.8 11 Other Africa 1.6 5.2 5.2 12 Brazil 0.7 3.3 3.3 13 Other Latin America 3.2 6.5 6.5 Developed Countries (1-6) 83.8 67.8 66.9 Developing Countries (7-13) 16.2 32.2 33.1 EFFICIENCY: UNFCCC Article 3.3 “policies and measures to deal with climate change should be cost-effective so as to ensure global benefits at the lowest possible cost” Why Delay Mitigation Actions? Future Generations shall be: Affluent More Capable Knowledge Technologies BURDEN SHARING AGREEMENT: Developing Country Concerns UNFAIR BACKGROUND CONDITIONS ASYMMETRY OF EMISSIONS & IMPACTS UNFAVOURABLE TIMING Intergenerational Concerns Total Burden Sharing Mitigation Impacts Risks (including extreme events) Minimize Welfare Losses Burden Sharing based on Income Equity Principles: The North - South Divide North South EFFICIENCY (MARGINAL COST) HISTORICAL RESPONSIBILITY GRANDFATHERING OBLIGATION TO PAY BASIC NEEDS ABILITY TO PAY RAWLSIAN CRITERIA PER CAPITA ENTITLEMENTS (EGALITARIAN) Cumulative Carbon Emissions(1991 to 2100) for IPCC - IS92 Emission Scenarios Emissions Scenario IS92a IS92b IS92c IS92d IS92e IS92f Cumulative Emissions: 1991 - 2100 (Giga Ton Carbon) 1500 1430 785 975 2187 1845 Cumulative Carbon Emissions (1991 to 2100): “S” and “WRE” Concentration Stabilization Trajectories Cumulative Carbon Emissions (GT Carbon) Stabilization Target “S” Trajectory “WRE” Trajectory 450 ppmv 628 714 550 ppmv 872 1043 650 ppmv 1038 1239 750 ppmv 1194 1348 Mitigation Needed for Stabilization (from 1990 to 2100) Stabilization Target Mitigation Needed for IS92 Case (Billion Tons of Carbon) 450 ppmv 872 -786 550 ppmv 628 - 457 650 ppmv 462 - 261 750 ppmv 306 - 152 Convergence of Per Capita Emissions Conventional Concept 2.0 Industrial Countries Emission Profile Convergence Target 0.7 0.3 Developing Countries Emission Profile 2000 2050 Years 2100 Equitable Convergence 2.0 Industrial Countries Emission Profile Convergence Target 0.7 0.3 Developing Countries Emission Profile 2000 2050 Years 2100 Gain/Loss for India under Different Permit Schemes 80 • Distribution matters 40 US$ Billion (1993) • India’s gains/ losses can be several % of GDP 60 Per capita 20 0 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 -20 -40 -60 -80 Grandfathered PROTOCOL WITH INCOME BASED ENTRY AND TECHNOLOGY CONDITIONS EQUITY CRITERIA Non- Annex I enters when income (in PPP) equals 2020 Annex I Income TECHNOLOGY CONDITIOS (Annex I to implement after 2020) New Fossil Power Plants to scrub and dispose carbon from exhaust New Synthetic fuels to capture and dispose carbon released in conversion WHEN SOME NON-ANNEX JOIN IN? China in 2045; India in 2062 EFFICIENCY 30 percent expensive than most cost-effective mitigation SEPARABILITY OF EQUITY AND EFFICIENCY COASE THEOREM Stipulates in absence of transaction costs, market exchange will lead to efficient resource allocation regardless of distribution of rights Implies the process of minimizing burden size is independent of the burden sharing scheme SEPARABILITY OF EQUITY AND EFFICIENCY COASE THEOREM: TWO INTERPRETATIONS 1. Neo-Classical/ Northern World View Equity is irrelevant to global co-operation 2. Developing Country Perspective Efficiency is simple - just needs agreeing on instruments. Equity (sharing of burden) is vital Sharing the Burden 1. Stabilization Burden shall be substantive 2. Significant mitigation shall be in NA-I (“Where” Flexibility for Cost Effectiveness) 3. Transition from Cost to Welfare Effectiveness (“Justice” in Burden sharing is vital) Conclusions: A Fair Agreement Burden Sharing Explicit Burden Sharing Regime Fair Competition Polluter Pays Market Price for CDM Mitigation Minimize Welfare Losses Ability to Pay Compensation for Impacts Precautionary Principle Hedge against extreme events Protect most vulnerable “It is the nature and the advantage of strong people that they can bring out the crucial questions and form a clear opinion about them. The weak always have to decide between alternatives which are not their own.” Dietrich Bonhoeffer German Philosopher, anti-Nazi thinker (executed in Flossenburg concentration camp, April 9, 1945)