X   CO²  MONDE 2004       80%POLLUTION 2005  T / HAB 2005  BRIC (Brésil - Russie- Inde- Chine) - Wiki     MTEP   BRIC/MONDE        FICHES  CIA PAR PAYS
comparaison BRIC USA UE       World.Resources.Institute    
        BRESIL -40% en 2020 si          LOI -36% 2020                     russie                                  inde             chine/copenhague     
            bresil premier en credits de co2     CDM ECONOMIE RUSSE 100129              pollution inde                  pol clim        politique climat
        BRESIL PRENDRA SES RESPONSABILITES           chine intensite energetique
      BIOFUELS PETROBRAS           ETHANOL WIKI      chine  limiter engagements 090925
      CO² RUSSIE 081030    

           

 

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethanol_fuel_in_Brazil

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                                     BRESIL MOINS 40% EN 2020

ao PSaulo - Brazil plans to lower its emissions of the main greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2) by nearly 40 per cent by 2020, the government said in Sao Paulo late Friday. The move by the world's fifth largest country comes ahead of December's crucial climate change talks in Copenhagen, and as President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was in Paris for climate talks with French President Nicolas Sarkozy.                                                                                                                                                      In Brasilia, Lula's Chief of Staff Dilma Rousseff emphasised that the ambitious goal was voluntary. Brazil intends to emit around one billion fewer tons of CO2 by 2020 than it otherwise would have.                                                                                                                                                                                                                The actual target ranges from a CO2 reduction of at least 36.1 per cent up to 38.9 per cent. If the target is met, Brazil's emission levels in 2020 would be roughly equivalent to those of 1994, at around 1.7 billion tonnes annually.

Approximately one quarter of the target will be achieved through a drastic reduction of rainforest deforestation.                                                                                          The South American nation also intends to reduce the rate of deforestation in the Amazon rainforest by 80 per cent.

Jose Manuel Barroso,the head of the European Union executive, praised the Brazilian commitment, saying in a statement, "With this decision, Brazil is amongst the first of the major emerging countries to make such a pledge.

"This is a potentially decisive step to achieve a global deal in Copenhagen in December and to succeed in the fight against climate change."

Last week the government of Brazil announced that deforestation of the Amazon rainforest was at its lowest level for 21 years.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Lula : le Brésil prendra ses responsabilités pour la réduction de CO2

Le président brésilien Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva a annoncé que le Brésil prendrait ses responsabilités dans la réduction des émissions de gaz à effet de serre provoquées par la déforestation de l'Amazonie lors de la conférence sur le climat à Copenhague, dans une interview à l'AFP.

AFP - le 03 septembre 2009, 19h35
 

"Nous ne fuirons pas notre responsabilité dans le débat sur les objectifs et les engagements. Nous avons l'obligation morale de réduire la déforestation en Amazonie", a souligné Lula dans cette interview accordée mercredi.

Le Brésil est le quatrième émetteur de gaz à effets de serre de la planète, notamment en raison des déboisements en Amazonie.

L'accord attendu à Copenhague en décembre doit succéder au Protocole de Kyoto à partir de 2013: il doit permettre d'endiguer l'envolée des émissions de gaz à effet de serre qui risquent de conduire à un réchauffement global pouvant aller jusqu'à 6,4°C à la fin du siècle, selon les prévisions du Groupe intergouvernemental d'experts sur l'évolution du climat (Giec).

Jusqu'à présent, le géant sud-américain s'était refusé à fixer des objectifs de réduction des émissions de CO2, estimant que le protocole de Kyoto n'engageait que les pays industrialisés, pollueurs historiques. Maintenant il subordonne l'adoption d'objectifs de réduction à un compromis des pays riches.

"Nous voulons que chaque pays prenne ses responsabilités sur les dégats qu'il cause à la planète" et, "s'il n'y a pas d'engagement sur les objectifs de préservation des forêts (de la part des pays en développement) et sur la réduction des émissions de CO2 de la part des pays riches, ce sera une fausse discussion où seuls paieront les pauvres", a estimé le chef de l'Etat.

Lula s'est dit favorable à la création d'un fonds pour aider les pays pauvres à combattre la déforestation, mais pas "au détriment" d'un objectif ambitieux de réduction des émissions de CO2 de la part des riches.

"Personne ne peut exiger que la Chine ait la même responsabilité que les Etats-Unis, ou que le Brésil ait la même responsabilité que l'Angleterre ou la France" parce que ces derniers émettent du CO2 "depuis très longtemps".

"Notre idée est que nous puissions élaborer un accord entre la position brésilienne, européenne et américaine pour voir si nous pouvons faire un pas en avant par rapport au protocole de Kyoto que les Américains n'ont pas ratifié", a ajouté le président brésilien.

Il a indiqué que la position brésilienne sur le taux de réduction de CO2 que le pays s'engagera à respecter sera définie d'ici à novembre.

A la fin 2008, le Brésil s'est engagé pour la première fois à réduire son rythme de déforestation en Amazonie de 70% d'ici à 2018 (par rapport aux dix dernières années).

"Ce seront 4,8 milliards de tonnes de moins de CO2 lancées dans l'atmosphère. C'est plus que ce que les pays riches réunis se sont engagés à faire à Kyoto", s'est félicité le ministre brésilien de l'Environnement, Carlos Minc dans une récente interview à l'AFP.

En 2008, 13.000 km2 de forêt amazonienne sont partis en fumée en raison de l'ouverture de pâturages pour l'élevage de bovins, de cultures et d'abattage clandestin des arbres. Cette année, la destruction devrait être de 9.000 km2, la plus faible des 20 dernières années, selon le ministre.

A Copenhague, le Brésil arrivera avec "un objectif précis de réduction" des émissions de CO2, a souligné M. Minc.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Le brésil, leader mondial de crédit de CO2
Le brésil, leader mondial de crédit de CO2Le Brésil est devenu un leader mondial en projets de crédits de carbone, un marché qui a généré 9,4 milliards (ou 11,6 milliards de dollars) en 2005, année de l’entrée en vigueur du Protocole de Kyoto, un pacte mondial pour réduire les émissions de gaz polluants. Au total, 37 programmes brésiliens sont enregistrés à l’ONU – l’organisme responsable de la vérification et l des projets – sur une palette de 150 opération de ce type. Le Brésil dépasse l’Inde (28), le Mexique (15), le Chili (10), le Honduras (9) et la Chine (7). “Nous sommes les leaders mondiaux du segment de crédit de carbone et une référence pour 76 autres pays en développement qui ont signé le Protocole de Kyoto”, affirme Marcelo Junqueira, vice-président du secteur des transactions de Ecoenergy, une entreprise spécialisée en projets énergétiques dont le siège est aux Etats-Unis mais qui a des bureaux au Brésil et dans d’autres pays d’Amérique Latine.

Toutefois, même si le Brésil est en avance en termes de nombre de projets approuvés par l’ONU, l’Inde a de fortes chances de prendre sa place dans les prochains mois. En effet, l’Inde a actuellement plus de projets à l’ONU (61 au total) que le Brésil (45), en phase d’évaluation et susceptibles d’être approuvés. Cependant, les demandes de révision de projets sont rares, d’après M. Junqueira.

“L’Inde et la Chine sont les principaux concurrents du Brésil dans la recherche de fonds pour des projets de crédit de carbone ”, affirme Linda Murasawa, directrice du secteur de produits socio environnementaux de ABN Amro Real. D’après elle, ces deux pays utilisent beaucoup le charbon comme matière énergétique, mais l’Inde a plus d’options que la Chine car elle peut exploiter du gaz naturel, l’énergie éolienne, solaire et hydroélectrique.
(src : Brasil International Gazeta - 10/04/2006)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

TRI CO² pays population, gdp gdp (pppj) prod energy net imports tpes elec (TWH) CO² /hab
1 United States 293,95 ####### ####### 1641,04 714,51 2325,89 3920,61 5799,97 19,73
2 People's Rep, of China 1296,16 1715 7023,71 1536,78 90,37 1609,35 2054,57 4732,26 3,65
4 Russia 143,85 328,81 1309,12 1158,46 -511,01 641,53 811,65 1528,78 10,63
3 Japan 127,69 4932,5 3431,64 96,76 440,75 533,2 1031,26 1214,99 9,52
7 India 1079,72 581,22 3115,31 466,87 105,8 572,85 493,78 1102,81 1,02
5 Germany 82,5 1952,7 2160,03 136,01 215,76 348,04 579,98 848,6 10,29
6 Canada 31,95 786,7 946,9 397,49 -134 269,05 548,79 550,86 17,24
9 United Kingdom 59,84 1591,1 1661,29 225,21 11,65 233,69 371,31 537,05 8,97
12 Italy 58,13 1114,2 1495,76 30,14 157,93 184,46 328,11 462,32 7,95
11 Korea 48,08 613,1 920,65 38,03 184,02 213,05 355,37 462,1 9,61
8 France 62,18 1414,8 1678,33 137,42 140,41 275,17 478,1 386,92 6,22
17 Mexico 104 619,4 956,8 253,86 -86,15 165,48 187,62 373,68 3,59
21 islamic Rep, of Iran 67,01 126,32 463,4 277,99 -131,56 145,84 137,05 369,38 5,51
15 Australia 20,21 455,6 598,31 261,77 -143,76 115,78 224,89 354,36 17,53
14 South Africa 45,51 150,74 468,12 156 -24,02 131,14 226,46 343,36 7,54
27 Indonesia 217,59 197,18 721,62 258,01 -83,62 174,04 104,05 336,32 1,55
13 Spain 42,69 655,6 957,97 32,53 115,96 142,2 252,91 329,77 7,72
19 Saudi Arabia 23,95 214,94 304,31 556,21 -413,64 140,41 148,03 324,88 13,56
10 Brazil 183,91 655,38 1385,12 176,31 31,33 204,85 359,56 323,32 1,76
18 Ukraine 47,45 44,04 278,85 76,29 64,3 140,33 149,52 304,85 6,42
22 Poland 38,18 186,6 445,24 78,81 13,54 91,74 130,51 296,08 7,75
16 Chinese Taipei 22,69 323,73 484,21 12,76 96,05 104,24 210,2 255,42 11,26
23 Turkey 71,79 229,3 528,65 24,11 58,2 81,9 126,77 209,45 2,92
24 Thailand 63,69 150,06 473,56 50,1 47,46 97,07 118,76 206,91 3,25
 

 *GDP PURCHASING POWER  PARITY

**France 10°

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                                                                   T / HAB 2005

                     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                                   80% POLLUTION MONDIALE EN 2005

                                                     
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Conférence de Copenhague : la Chine veut limiter ses engagements

Eric meyerLa Chine, pays le plus émetteur de CO2 du monde (24% des émissions mondiales), est prête à réduire « de façon notable » la croissance de ses émissions, a déclaré le président Hu Hintao le 22 septembre à New York. Un premier pas encore très timide dans la lutte contre le réchauffement climatique à moins de trois mois du sommet de Copenhague. L'éclairage d’Eric Meyer, journaliste et analyste à Pékin, qui a supervisé une étude détaillée sur « La stratégie de la Chine à Copenhague ».

GreenUnivers : le sommet de Copenhague est-il un rendez-vous important pour le gouvernement chinois ?

C’est un rendez-vous jugé de la plus haute importance. Les autorités chinoises en attendent beaucoup. Mais comme tous les sujets, il donne lieu à de longues et tortueuses négociations entre les provinces et Pékin. Il y a en fait deux clans qui s’opposent. D’un côté, des responsables politiques de la nouvelle génération : ils ont conscience de la nécessité d’agir pour lutter contre le réchauffement climatique. Pas seulement pour préserver l’environnement, mais aussi pour le bien de l’économie chinoise : si la température s’accroît dans des proportions importantes,  elle pourrait avoir un impact terrible, par exemple affecter la production de céréales avec une baisse de près de 30% des récoltes, selon les experts. Ce qui serait dramatique pour les paysans et, au-delà, pourrait mettre  en péril le système économique et politique du pays. Ces responsables politiques sont donc favorables à un engagement de la Chine. De l’autre côté, les responsables les plus importants restent opposés à des objectifs contraignants sur les émissions de CO2.

GU : quel est le clan le plus important ?

La "vieille garde" réfractaire à des engagements domine largement. Elle est bien consciente de l’impact sur l’environnement des émissions de CO2 mais elle fait passer la croissance du pays en priorité : la Chine a besoin de centrales à charbon, de construire des usines, des cimenteries, des aciéries… Tant pis pour la pollution, la prospérité économique passe avant. Ces responsables estiment aussi que les pays industrialisés polluent depuis plus longtemps et que donc la Chine a « le droit » de rattraper son retard : ils souhaitent qu’on la laisse tranquille pendant vingt ou vingt-cinq ans. Enfin, ils rappellent souvent que si la Chine est le pays qui émet le plus de CO2 au monde globalement, ce n’est plus vrai rapporté à sa population : par habitant, les Etats-Unis sont devant. Pour eux, la Chine n’a donc pas de leçons à recevoir des Américains.

GU : quel est la scénario le plus probable pour le sommet de Copenhague ?

La Chine va essayer de limiter l’impact du sommet pour elle. Elle pourrait tenter de s’entendre avec le lobby industriel américain qui ne veut pas d’un engagement trop fort à Copenhague : une alliance défensive. Mais elle sait aussi qu’elle risque de tout perdre si elle adopte une attitude trop défensive. Pekin évaluera donc le rapport de forces, comme toujours : si les Etats-Unis et l’Europe établissent un front commun et font pression sur la Chine, avec par exemple une menace de taxe sur ses produits si elle ne signe pas, elle devra accepter des concessions. Sinon, elle jouera sur leurs divisions pour sauver les meubles. Les Chinois se méfient de l’attitude d’Obama, mais en même temps, ils se rappellent que la président Clinton avait lui aussi voulu s’engager contre le réchauffement climatique, mais n’avait pas été suivi par son Congrès qui n’avait pas ratifié le protocole de Kyoto. Ils évalueront donc le poids réel d’Obama soigneusement.

GU :  Pékin n’est pas prêt à s’engager fortement, mais pourtant la Chine mise beaucoup sur les cleantech : elle investit massivement dans les énergies renouvelables, les voitures électriques…

Oui, cela lui permet notamment de montrer sa bonne volonté aux yeux du monde. Et puis il y a un intérêt économique capital : ces marchés sont amenés à se développer, la Chine le sait bien. Aujourd’hui, elle multiplie les coopérations dans ces secteurs, attire les industriels occidentaux pour s’inspirer de leurs technologies. Et ensuite, elle développera elle-même sa technologie dans ses secteurs et espère bien la revendre alors aux Occidentaux grâce à des coûts de production plus faibles. Elle a déjà de belles entreprises, comme Suntech dans la production de panneaux solaires ou BYD dans les véhicules électriques. Les Chinois font aussi des partenariats dans la capture et le stockage du CO2 et, là encore, dans dix ou vingt ans, ils revendront peut-être leur technologie aux pays industrialisés. C'est en tout cas leur objectif

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                         COMPARAISON BRIC USA UE

cia factbooks POP / MILLION HABS INDICE DVLPT HUMAIN 2008*   pib*  (GDP) GDP/HAB   CO2 CO2/HAB         superficie  KM²
chine 1336         2092 6000     3.65         9,596,961 
%/tot                   20% 81°         22%            
inde 1186         703 2900     1.02         3,287,263 
%/tot 17% 128°         5%            
brésil 194     765 10200               8,514,877 
%/tot  3% 70°                      
Russie 140     373 16100     10.63         17,098,242 
%/tot 2% 67°         7%            
USA 309        11265 47500     19.7         9,826,675 
%/tot  5% 12°         26%            
UE  492     14940 33700                
%/tot 7% **                      
%/MONDE 55%                        
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What Does China Think About Climate Change and Copenhagen?

Senior official stresses:

  • Low carbon path is in China’s interest
  • China is implementing CO2 control policies
  • China is strengthening its systems for monitoring and verification

 

Probably the biggest question we’ve been hearing everyone ask since Copenhagen is “what do the Chinese think?” While an awful lot of commentators have imputed all sorts of views to the Chinese government, and the Chinese government itself did tell us how they viewed their own role in the process in a late December Xinhua piece that we have linked to before, we’ve now found probably the most definitive presentation of both where China is in its own domestic thinking on climate change and how Copenhagen has influenced China’s views of the international process. China’s Climate Change Minister Xie Zhenhua gave a speech January 9 at Beijing University’s Guanghua School of Management’s annual New Year’s Symposium (see the original Chinese text on the Sina website, but to assist our non-Chinese speaking readership we also provide our own informal translation in the ChinaFAQs library).

The most striking aspect of this speech is the powerful case Minister Xie makes for the urgency of China’s pursuing a low carbon pathway for its own interest. He emphasizes that China faces resource constraints, pollution and poverty, and that a low-carbon, energy efficient economy makes sense. He also acknowledges the importance of improving measurement, reporting and transparency to help ensure effective domestic results and the need for China to report these results both domestically and to the international community.

Xie also sees China’s choice in terms of international competitiveness. He describes a future carbon-constrained world where the countries that have developed the best low-carbon technologies will be the clear winners.

Xie also lauds the domestic policies of other countries – particularly Japan’s efforts to improve energy efficiency and the investments in new technology made under last year’s stimulus package.

But Xie is also clearly concerned about the tenor of the international discussion and the motives of his negotiating partners. He is concerned by pressure for emissions reductions that he thinks will be too rapid for China to manage without impinging on its economic development. Xie is quite frank in seeing the negotiations as in part about “who pays,” and he describes the complex concerns that many countries have about competitiveness and the agreement from a Chinese perspective.

It is worth reading this speech to its end to see how these concerns about international rivalries are ultimately answered by Xie, by focusing on China’s domestic need for a cleaner, more efficient economy. Xie goes into quite a bit of detail in how China’s 40-45% carbon-intensity goal will be translated into provincial, local and sector-specific targets. He is uncomfortable with international verification, but he emphasizes that China needs this data for itself. He also encourages more policy research from China’s universities and think tanks.

Photo by frankartculinary, courtesy of a Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 Generic.

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Future Prospects of China’s Policy on Climate Change By JianJun Tu

 

 China’s economic boom has made the country a dominant producer of man made greenhouse gases (GHG). Since 1978, China’s fuel combustion carbon dioxide (CO2) emission has quadrupled, reaching 5,664 Mt in 2006 and 6,110 Mt in 2007 [1]. In comparison, the United States emitted 5,826 Mt CO2 in 2006 [2]. China has already surpassed the United States as the world’s largest emitter of CO2 and shows no signs of cutting down on emissions. While it is unlikely for a developed economy such as the United States to increase its emissions annually by 5 percent, given China’s present level of economic development relative to its growth future, its current GHG emissions pale in comparison to what can be expected in the coming decades. In response to increasing international and domestic pressure on China’s uncontrollable spikes in GHG emissions, on October 29, 2008 the Chinese State Council published the country’s first White Paper on climate change entitled China’s Policies and Actions for Addressing Climate Change (China Daily, October 29, 2008).

 The White Paper is intended to serve as the blueprint for a coordinated policy response by the Beijing authorities toward this imminent national and international challenge.

CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY IN CHINA

 The issue of climate change has attracted virtually no public or political attention from the Chinese in the 1960s, and only a little during the energy-policy debates of the developed world in the 1970s [3]. When Deng Xiaoping first opened the Communist country’s inward-looking, agrarian economy to the outside world in 1978, China’s GDP accounted for less than 1 percent of world total [4]. Yet due to China’s heavy reliance on carbon-intensive coal and the widespread application of inefficient technology in its industrial sector, China’s CO2 emissions already accounted for around 8 percent of the global total, ranking second only to the United States. Since then, China’s share of global CO2 emissions has increased rapidly and by 2006 composed approximately 20 percent of the world total [5]. The 7.8% spike of primary energy consumption between 2006 and 2007 finally made China the world’s largest CO2 emitter [6]. While this assessment is based on emissions factors published by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), China’s 2007 CO2 championship would be questionable only if significantly lower-than-IPCC emissions factors for coal are used to calculate its GHG emissions inventory. Given the fact that the IPCC factors have been used by the National Development and Reform Commission [NDRC] to set baseline emissions intensities of China’s electric grids under the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) [7], the utilization of noticeably lowerthan- IPCC emissions factors to calculate China’s recent GHG emissions is a controversial practice

 China began to co-ordinate its climate change policy in 1988 when it established an inter-agency group that helped to formulate its positions for forthcoming international climate negotiations. Subsequently, the National Climate Change Coordination Leading Small Group (CCCLSG) was established in 1990, which is an inter-ministerial level committee chaired by the former State Development Planning Commission (SDPC, renamed NDRC in 2003). The 15-member committee in turn set up working groups on impact assessment and a response strategy to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

 In 1992, China ratified the UNFCCC, the fifth country in the world to do so. China has been an active and visible participant in the international climate negotiations, usually acting in concert with the developing country group (G77/China). China’s positions have usually been in line with those of the G77 countries, but Chinese representatives have often felt a need to reiterate the Chinese views in addition to the G77/China statements [8]. In the past, China’s climate change policy was shaped by the interests and priorities of a few key players, with input from several less influential actors. Before the Chinese governmental restructuring in 1998, responsibility for climate change coordination was with the China Meteorological Administration (CMA). Together with the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), the CMA is one of the lead agencies in the scientific discussion on climate change. However, with the climate change focus turning increasingly toward economic impact, the influence of the CMA has diminished. In 1998, the responsibility of coordinating national climate change efforts was transferred to the former SDPC, which signified that climate change was no longer perceived solely in scientific terms, but increasingly in political and economic perspectives [9]. The NDRC heads the delegation to climate negotiations while the lead negotiator is often from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA). They together emphasized economic development and sovereignty concerns. Moreover, they have the responsibility to ensure that China does not take on commitments that will impede economic development or have an impact on energy security. Other actors (such as the State Science and Technology Commission, now the Ministry of Science and Technology, and the then National Environmental Protection Agency, renamed the State Environmental Protection Administration in 1998) had been more positive and believed there were potential benefits for China (e.g. access to technology) [10]. Though SEPA was widely regarded as a weak administration, with its promotion as the Ministry of Environmental Protection in 2008, the MEP is expected to become more influential in the future.

FUTURE PROSPECTS FOR CHINA’S CLIMATE POLICY

 For the Chinese leadership, the urgency of maintaining social stability and economic development is coupled with the party’s political legitimacy. Since the late 1970s, rapid socio-economic changes have created a different political environment in which the Mao Zedong-styled charismaand revolution-based party leadership declined in political relevancy. Unlike the Mao regime, the reform-era under Deng Xiaoping’s administration needed to build and consolidate its political power on the principle of economic rationality. Through the programs of economic reform and open-door policies fused with the promise of a more prosperous society in the future, Deng was able to regain the trust of the Chinese people, who were disillusioned by the party under Mao. While the CCP has been converted from a Maoist revolutionary party to a Dengist reformist party and is now attempting to transform itself into an “institutionalized ruling party,” Chinese policymakers will have to increasingly justify the CCP’s political reign based on the rationality of economic principles and market reforms rather than the personal charisma of Communist leaders and the Party’s legacy [11]. Chinese policymakers are beginning to realize the need for a sustainable economic strategy, which largely explains why Beijing has over the past decade tried to factor more environmental considerations into national development plans. Yet, those efforts so far have primarily focused on localized environmental measures to control air, water, and soil pollution; in comparison, the GHG emitting issue with a global nature is considered as less pressing and thus given much lower political priority, especially at the local levels.

 According to this researcher’s recent book entitled Modeling China’s Energy Future: Climate Change, Air Pollution and Supply Security, while auxiliary benefits of local air pollution abatement by climate change policy instruments such as a carbon tax are significant, the co-impact on GHG emissions by air quality improvement measurements such as a sulphur tax is relatively small [12].

While Beijing has been able to successfully limit national sulphur dioxide emissions, a major precursor of China’s widespread acid rain, which only increased slightly from 23.7 Mt in 1995 to 24.68 Mt in 2007 [13], the country’s GHG emissions has more than doubled from about 3,540 MtCO2e to 7,191 MtCO2e during the same period [14]. Though there is an ongoing debate on the costs required for deep GHG abatement, Chinese policymakers and academia generally weigh GHG emissions control as significant liabilities instead of potential assets to the national economy [15].

Such perceptions were reinforced by the outgoing Bush administration’s withdrawal from the Kyoto Protocol in 2001 and most of Annex I countries’ failure to meet their Kyoto commitments. Beijing has already expressed it’s belief that any mandatory emission cap would unfairly limit the nation’s economic growth.

Thus, rejecting mandatory emissions caps will be the bottom line for Beijing’s climate policy in the foreseeable future. Ironically,

although the U.S. government used the absence of key developing countries as an excuse to justify its withdrawal from the Kyoto Protocol, the sudden disappearance of U.S. pressure on China in 2001 actually made it possible for Beijing to maintain a “wait and see” climate policy for quite a while. Given the necessity of balancing economic growth with portraying itself as a responsible power, Beijing understands that it cannot escape the responsibility of curbing its spiking GHG emissions forever, so it has bid it’s time developing an increasingly proactive and comprehensive climate policy.

 For instance, according to China’s 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-2010), a 20 percent energy intensity improvement target can translate into an annual reduction of over 1.5 billion ton of CO2 by 2010, making the largely energy security—and local pollution-based effort one of the most significant carbon mitigation initiatives in the world [16].

While China’s energy to GDP intensity has declined by 12 percent between 2005 and 2007, the progress so far is promising [17].

In June 2007, China released its much anticipated National Climate Change Strategy, which confirms that climate change has captured the attention of Chinese policymakers (China Brief, June 27, 2007). When the Information Office of the State Council issued the country’s first white paper on its energy circumstances and policy in December 2007, the paper not only defended China’s position of not accepting legally binding GHG emissions target, but for the first time placed “control of GHG emissions” as the highest environmental priority ahead of “fighting ecological destruction and environmental pollution” (China Brief, March 28, 2008). This signaled a shift in Beijing’s priorities and was subsequently followed by the issuing of China’s first white paper on climate change on October 29, 2008. During past climate negotiations, many developing nations held China in high regard as a shrewd, well-prepared negotiator. China also enjoyed considerable influence in this group and thus has no intention of breaking its partnership with G-77 in the near future. While China will continuously defend its own interests by teaming with other developing countries, Beijing’s stance on climate change also depends on developed nations. If the United States is continuously out of the game, European Union alone is unlikely to lure or coerce China into any mandatory climate commitment.

In comparison, a consolidated developed world led by both the European Union and the U.S. is more likely to convey the necessity of international cooperation on climate change. Under the latter scenario, China is likely to voluntarily initiate concrete GHG abatement measurements in order to ease international pressure. China feels that it must be prepared for such a scenario and this largely explains the rationale behind Beijing’s recent endeavor of assessing impacts of climate policy instruments. If developed nations as a whole could meet their GHG reduction commitments, it is not unimaginable that China may eventually accept an intensity-based mandatory GHG reduction target.

 LONG TERM CHALLENGES AHEAD With a purchasing power parity-adjusted per capita GDP at $5,400 in 2007 (PBS, November 14, 2008), China’s long enjoyed status as a poor developing country is likely to be difficult to defend. As the world’s largest CO2 emitter, China will be held responsible for its increasing contribution to the GHG concentration in the atmosphere. Furthermore, Beijing’s impressive GHG reduction achievements in late 1990s turned out to be largely an embarrassing underreporting of coal statistics (China Brief, May 9, 2007). Finally, China’s per capita emission is near the world average, making it difficult to maintain all of Beijing’s fundamental arguments to defend its current position. To make the matter worse, different views on climate change commitments have emerged amongst developing countries. For example, low lying islands are especially susceptible to changes in sea level and storm surges and, as a result, the Alliance of Small Island States, a coalition of 43 small islands and low-lying coastal countries, is likely to differ with China with respect to climate commitments by key developing nations. In addition, China’s dominance in the CDM market is likely to stir negative feelings amongst ChinaBrief Volume IX  Issue 1  January 12, 2009 14 other developing nations. While energy-economy models are one effective tool used extensively in the past to evaluate climate policies, significant barriers exist in China to prevent the buildup of sufficient domestic capacity to undertake climate policy assessments. For instance, the crucial step of a modelling analysis, the establishment of baseline forecast, is a hazardous business in China. To improve the capacity of its modelling community, the U.S. Department of Energy set a good example by regularly examining performance of forecasts in past studies. Unfortunately, a similar practice does not exist in China. Moreover, Chinese energy policymakers even used the discrepancy between existing forecasts and statistics as an excuse to attack the usefulness of energyeconomy models. The prominent Energy Research Institute is an apparent victim of such mentality. The Chinese climate modelling community relies too heavily on outside funding. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, strong foreign interests in China’s energy sector made the access of international funding an easy task for most established modeling teams in China. However, after the spectacular Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics, and the Chinese Taikounaut’s first space walk, Western governments will likely cut their development funds to China, especially under the recent financial turmoil. Still , whether Beijing will step up to meet financial shortfalls of its modelling community is still an open question. Furthermore, the lack of competition for government contracts threatens the healthy development of domestic modelling capacity. Currently, the project allocation mechanism in China still favors analysts with most connections, not necessarily those with best expertise. Invisible picket lines upon certain sensitive topics in China have seriously undermined the academic integrity of some climate research projects.

In October 2008, the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) released a report projecting that China’s national GHG emissions may more than double within the next two decades. Ironically, one of the most important components of such a study, China’s current GHG emissions, is absent (Reuters, October 23, 2008). If the pace of global warming continues as predicted, every ton of GHG emissions, regardless of its nation of origin, will have dire consequences on environmental sustainability. Since 1995, while China’s GHG emissions intensity has been cut in half, its absolute emissions have more than doubled during the same period. Such contrast indicates that rapid economic development can undermine the effectiveness of any intensity-based climate initiative. Fortunately, one emerging technology, namely carbon capture and storage (CCS), carries great potential for reducing China’s GHG emissions while allowing the country to continuously rely on fossil fuels for economic development. However, there is no policy signs to confirm that Beijing would set aside the funding necessary for realizing such future-oriented technologies. China’s importance in the international climate politics is expected to keep rising especially given China’s recent CO2 championship. Unfortunately, China will continuously reject mandatory emissions cap on the ground of the necessity for developing its economy. Nevertheless, Beijing has realized the mounting pressure on its climate stances, and prepared itself by formulating increasingly proactive and comprehensive climate policy.

 If developed countries were able to meet their GHG abatement commitments, it would not be unimaginable that China may accept an intensity-based emissions target. Even so, the global effort to combat climate change is still expected to fall short as it is the absolute emissions, rather than GHG intensities, that matter most. Fortunately, advanced emissions abatement techniques such as CCS possess great potential for reducing a country’s absolute emissions. Beijing should seriously assess costs and benefits of funding the commercialization of such techniques. Finally, it is in Beijing’s best interest to remove all barriers that suppress the intellectual potential of its climate policy research community.

 

Kevin JianJun Tu (jjtu@mkja.ca) is a Vancouver-based senior energy and environmental consultant, and a research associate of the Canadian Industrial Energy End-Use Data and Analysis Centre. He is the author of the recent book entitled Modelling China’s Energy Future: Climate Change, Air Pollution and Supply Security. NOTES 1. The author’s estimation is based on China’s 2006 National Energy Balance Table and China’s 2007 preliminary national energy consumption data from the National Bureau of Statistics. The emissions factors used by the author are based on 2006 IPCC Guidelines for National Greenhouse Gas Inventories. 2. U.S. EPA (2008). Inventory of U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks: 1990-2006. 3. A. Dessler and E. Parson (2006).The Science and Politics of Global Climate Change: A Guide to the Debate. Cambridge University Press. 4. USDA Economic Research Service at http://www.ers. usda.gov/Data/Macroeconomics/. 5. IEA (2008). CO2 Emissions from Fuel Combustion 1971-2006. 6. NBS (2008). Statistical Communique of

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

30/04/2008 10:40 
      CO² RUSSIE 081030
Gouverner

L’après-Kyoto s’annonce de moins en moins ambitieux. Après le Japon, les pays émergents, les Etats-Unis, qui réclament chacun un accord international peu contraignant, la Russie a déclaré lundi 28 avril qu’elle n’acceptera pas la limitation de ses émissions dans le cadre d’un nouvel accord climatique.

«L’énergie ne doit pas être une barrière à notre confort. Notre classe moyenne émergente réclame beaucoup d’énergie et c’est notre travail d’assurer une offre confortable», selon l’officiel russe en charge des obligations liées au protocole, Vsevolod Gavrilov. Pas question donc de limiter les émissions russes de gaz à effet de serre, a-t-il ajouté.

La plupart des anciens pays soviétiques sont dans les clous du protocole de Kyoto grâce à l’effondrement de leur économie lors du passage au capitalisme en 1990. La Russie a «réussi» à réduire ses émissions de 29% en 2005 par rapport aux niveaux de 1990. Son objectif pour 2012 était la stagnation de ses émissions. Une tendance dont s’est accommodé le pays, qui réclame les mêmes objectifs pour le prochain accord climatique international.

L’officiel russe a pointé du doigt le refus américain de limiter ses émissions de CO2 dans un futur proche. Il a aussi indiqué que les investissements étrangers dans le cadre de la mise en œuvre conjointe (MOC,  F2 JOINT IMPLEMENTATION    )      qui permet à des pays «justes» en quotas de carbone d’aider au développement plus sobre des industries d’un autre pays, avaient permis d’éviter l’émission de 3 milliards de tonnes de CO2.      

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                 BRESIL MOINS 36.1 % EN 2020

Brazil's Global Warming Agenda

photo credit: World Resources Institute

Brazil has turned its international climate commitments into national law, but that’s only the beginning.

Since Copenhagen, over fifty countries have pledged greenhouse gas reduction targets to the UNFCCC. Brazil has gone a step further and turned its commitment into national law. This is a positive development, but if the reduction target is to be met, Brazilian lawmakers will need to provide further legislative details and make key decisions regarding the country’s newly-found oil reserves.

Brazil’s National Climate Change Policy

President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva signed the National Climate Change Policy (PNMC) just days after the closure of the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen. This is a crucial part of upholding Brazil’s international commitment.

                                                                                President Lula da Silva, photo credit: World Economic Forum

The PNMC is far-reaching and ambitious, addressing how Brazil will tackle its current and future greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to the impacts of climate change. Beyond providing an explanation of thirty-two emissions reducing activities currently being implemented in Brazil – such as the expansion of its hydroelectric power-generation capacity and the continuation of the National Ethanol Program – the PNMC also lists additional activities in the conception phase. While the plan is rather comprehensive in its economy-wide coverage, many of the proposed activities are in an early stage of development, recommended rather than mandatory, or lacking specific targets or implementation measures.

New Legislation Fills in Many Gaps

The PNMC became national policy through Lula’s signing of Brazilian law 12.187, which also establishes a national reduction target and discusses the process to move the PNMC towards implementation.

Most notably, law 12.187 officially adopts Brazil’s voluntary national greenhouse gas reduction target of between 36.1% and 38.9% of projected emissions by 2020. This in itself is a vital step for Brazil that many doubted possible. “A year ago, we didn’t have a climate plan or emissions goals, even though Brazil is the fifth or sixth largest emitter,” said Carlos Minc, Brazil’s Minister of Environment.

The new law also requires Brazil’s mitigation actions to be quantifiable and verifiable, meaning that international officials will be able to review and confirm whether or not emissions reductions have truly taken place. This will lay to rest doubts raised in the U.S. and elsewhere that developing countries might not allow their reductions to be subject to outside verification.

Although it does not specifically address all key issues, law 12.187 fills in many gaps. It provides more details on how Brazil will finance its climate change policies. It also estimates the necessary emissions reductions per sector, and states that an executive decree will further specify reduction targets in the future. These targets will be based on the second Brazilian Greenhouse Gas Emissions Inventory, which will be finalized this year.

The Presidential Veto and Brazil’s Oil Reserves

President Lula signed the law legally sanctioning the PNMC, but with an important veto. Lula rejected language calling for a “gradual abandonment” of the use of fossil fuels after pressure from the Ministry of Mines and Energy. The original text would have made it difficult for Brazil’s future economic growth to depend on energy that, while predominantly hydroelectric today, is increasingly generated from fossil fuels.

Whether and how Brazil uses oil money to finance sustainable development and low-carbon growth will be a key issue to watch in coming months.

With this veto Lula avoided, at least for the time being, contradictory issues playing out between Brazil’s climate concerns and the planned extraction of its recently discovered vast offshore deep-water oil reserves. The tensions are clear in a recent bill calling for the creation of social fund, financed by Brazil’s projected oil revenues, to support poverty alleviation and environmental sustainability programs, among other initiatives. Whether and how Brazil chooses to use oil money to finance sustainable development and low-carbon growth will be a key issue to watch in coming months.

The Meaning of a “Voluntary Target”

Although Brazil has generally been praised for passing the PNMC, a good deal of speculation exists regarding what a legislated voluntary target means. Minister of the Environment Minc told Brazilian newspaper Folha de São Paulo that the target will be met since it has been passed into law. “In my head, the word ‘voluntary’ does not mean that the commitment is not mandatory, just that the motivation is independent,” said Minc. If its climate change commitment is to ultimately be taken seriously, Brazil will need to provide further details on how it will implement and enforce a law with a voluntary target.

The PNMC and International Negotiations: What’s Next?

At the recent international climate talks in Copenhagen, Brazil’s strong PNMC proposal and reduction target gave the country a powerful presence. Brazil eventually drafted an accord with the U.S., China, India and South Africa to commit to internationally verified emissions cuts. By enacting the PNMC immediately after the international talks, Brazil showed its serious dedication to combating climate change.

Environment ministers from the BASIC countries – Brazil, South Africa, India and China – held their first meeting on January 25th to further develop details of the Copenhagen Accord. The meeting initiated the establishment of a fund to spur technology transfer to address global warming in poor countries. Future meetings, which will be held every three months, will work towards defining their voluntary emission reduction pledges. BASIC countries “have the obligation to be the first to submit climate action plans,” said South Africa’s environment minister, Buyelwa Sonjica.

Just like every country, Brazil must navigate some complicated domestic issues to implement its Climate Change Plan. How it approaches these challenges will determine whether Brazil can continue to be a leader in international climate action.