The rhetoric from the Paris climate deal is
reassuring, but the atmosphere can't read press releases. The level of carbon
in the atmosphere does not respond to declarations of victory. The chief driver
of dangerous climate change is the concentration of carbon dioxide in the
atmosphere. This is what creates the "greenhouse" effect of global
warming.
So first, a quick
reality check of where we're up to.
When Dr David Keeling
took the first reading of carbon dioxide concentration in the earth's
atmosphere at Mauna Loa in Hawaii in 1958, it was 315 parts per million.
A level of up to 350
is safe, we're told by experts. The danger zone begins somewhere in the 400 to
450 range, they tell us.
Beyond 450, the
chance of holding global warming to a maximum 2 degrees, the "tipping
point" of irreversible change, is only around 50:50, according to the
Climate Change Authority. It recommends no more than 415.
By the time the Kyoto
Protocol was hailed as humanity's successful response to the challenge of
climate change 39 years later, the carbon concentration had reached 363.
By the time of the 2009 Copenhagen anticlimax, it was 387.
The level of carbon
first moved into the danger zone of 400 ppm on May 9, 2013, according to the US
government's National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which operates
the Mauna Loa measuring station.
This was "more
than 100 ppm higher than at any time in the last one million years",
Charles Miller of NASA pointed out, "and maybe higher than any time in the
last 25 million years."
A couple of months
ago the son of the original Dr Keeling, Ralph Keeling, who has taken up his
father's line of work monitoring carbon levels for the Scripps Institution of
Oceanography, posed: "Will daily values at Mauna Loa ever fall below 400
ppm again in our lifetimes? I'm prepared to project that they won't."
As delegates in Paris
last Friday approached the climax of their negotiations, the Mauna Loa station
recorded a carbon concentration of 402 ppm, the latest available at the time of
writing.
At the current rate
of emissions, the world will reach 450 ppm in 25 years, or 2040, the point
where we take our chances on catastrophic climate change, according to the
International Renewable Energy Agency.
So with this
background, let's look at what the Paris agreement accomplished. It declares an
aim to keep warming "well below" 2 degrees Celsius, and to
"pursue efforts" to keep it to 1.5 degrees.
First, the bad news.
As climate activist and economics professor Jeffrey Sachs says: "Cynics
will say the agreement is unenforceable. They are right."
On the commitments in
the Paris agreement, the world is heading to 450 ppm and beyond. They sentence
the planet to a global average temperate rise of 2.7 degrees celsius above
pre-industrial levels, according to the UN and other analysts. That is,
the world is still on a trajectory to irreversible climate change.
As the ANU climate
economist Frank Jotzo puts it: "It's very obvious that there's a massive
commitment gap."
So why all the hoopla
and champagne popping in Paris? The first element is relief, relief that hope
is kept alive, that countries didn't walk out or talks collapse, that all
countries voiced support for the overarching aim of limiting warming.
Second is that the
deal creates a pathway to possible future success. As Environment Minister Greg
Hunt told me: "The Paris meeting won't deliver 2 degrees, but the Paris
process will."
The process is the
agreed reviews of the carbon-cutting targets, reviews set to occur every five
years starting on 2020.
"What matters is
the process," says eminent Melbourne University economist Ross Garnaut who
reported on climate change for the Rudd government. "It's clear and
strong and it has the unanimous support of the international community."
Further, the rules
say that the countries can only commit to doing more to cut carbon output, not
less – it's a one-way process.
Still, as Garnaut
says: "The trajectory of emissions reduction has to be a steep downwards
one after 2025 if we are to meet the 2050 commitment," of zero net
emissions by 2050.
"That will be
especially challenging for countries that have a slower start, such as
Australia." Australia, he says, will have to "run faster than other
developed nations after 2020.
"This will be
possible with little sacrifice to out standard of living. We have the richest
renewable energy resources per capita of all developed countries and we have
exceptional opportunities for biological sequestration."
Indeed Garnaut sees
Australia has a chance to emerge as a "renewable energy superpower if we
are half smart about it."
ANU's Jotzo says that
if the gap between hope and reality is to be bridged, it will be done largely
by the speed of technological advance: "It's progress on technology that
makes it all possible."
Garnaut points out
that in his 2008 report, he forecast that the cost of producing solar panel
would fall by a few percentage point per year. In reality, the cost has fallen
by 80per cent in seven years.
So at the heart of
the Paris agreement is a gamble on technological solutions.
It's an enormous
chance to take with the planet. The earth's atmosphere will be impressed only
if the gamble pays off.
Peter Hartcher is international
editor Sydney Morning Herald Illustration: John Shakespeare
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