The call was very clear, here were “four demands” for
Paris COP21 being presented to a group in London. But the surprise was
the presenter; not a climate focussed NGO or an activist campaigning for
change, but Fatih Birol, Chief Economist for the International Energy
Agency. He was in an optimistic mood, despite the previous two weeks of
ADP negotiations in Bonn that saw almost nothing happen.
He opened the
presentation by saying “This time it will work” (i.e. Paris, vs.
Copenhagen and all the other false starts). On June 15th Mr Birol launched the World Energy Outlook Special Report: Energy and Climate Change. The IEA usually launch a special supplement to their annual World Energy Outlook (WEO) and this one was the second to focus
on the climate challenge and the policy changes required for the world
to be on a 2°C emissions pathway. It was also something of a shot over
the bow for the Paris COP21 process which had just completed another two
weeks of negotiations in Bonn, but with little to show for the effort.
Mr Birol is a master of such presentations and this one was memorable.
He focussed almost entirely on the short term, although the publication
itself looks forward to 2030 for the most part. With regards to the
energy system, short term usually means 5 years or so, but in this case
short term really meant December but with the resulting actions being
very relevant for the period 2016-2020.
Mr Birol outlined four key pillars (as they are referred to in the publication) for COP21, but restated them as “demands”. They are;
- Emissions must peak by 2020. The IEA believes that this can be achieved with a near term focus on five measures;
- Energy Efficiency.
- High efficiency coal, both in new building and removing some existing facilities. IEA proposed a ban on building sub-critical coal.
- An even bigger push on renewable energy, with an increase in investment from $270 billion in 2014 to $400 billion in 2030.
- Oil and gas industry to reduce upstream methane emissions.
- Phasing out fossil-fuel subsidies to end-users by 2030.
- Implement a five year review process for NDCs (Nationally Determined Contributions) so that they can be rapidly adjusted to changing circumstances. I discussed the risk of a slow review process when MIT released a report on the possible COP21 outcome.
- Turn the global 2°C goal into clear emission reduction targets, both longer term and consistent shorter term goals.
- Track the transition – i.e. track the delivery of NDCs and transparently show how the global emissions pathway is developing as a result.
Interestingly
Mr. Birol didn’t mention carbon pricing once, at least not until a
question came up asking why he hadn’t mentioned carbon pricing – “Is carbon pricing no longer an important goal, you didn’t mention it?”
asked a curious member of those assembled at the Foreign Office. He
said yes it was, but given his focus was on Paris and that he saw little
chance of a global approach on carbon pricing being agreed in that
time-span, he didn’t mention it! I think this represents a major oversight on the part of the IEA although
there is at least some discussion on carbon pricing in the publication.
While it is true that a globally harmonised approach to carbon pricing
won’t be in place in the near term, I would argue that an essential 5th
pillar (or 5th demand) for Paris is recognition of the importance of
carbon pricing and creation of the necessary space for linking of
heterogeneous systems to take place. This looks like the fastest route towards a globally relevant price.
Mr.
Birol didn’t mention CCS either, which is perhaps more understandable
given the 5 year focus of much of the publication. However, Chapter 4
within the publication deals extensively with CCS and the IEA highlights
the importance of CCS in their 450 ppm scenario through the chart
below.
Finally,
there was some discussion around the climate statement made by the G7
the week before and their commitment out to 2100. Looking at the
statement released by the G7, they said;
“.
. . . .we emphasize that deep cuts in global greenhouse gas emissions
are required with a decarbonisation of the global economy over the
course of this century. Accordingly, as a common vision for a global
goal of greenhouse gas emissions reductions we support sharing with all
parties to the UNFCCC the upper end of the latest IPCC recommendation of
40 to 70 % reductions by 2050 compared to 2010 recognizing that this
challenge can only be met by a global response.”
My reading
of this is that the G7 are recognizing the need to be at or nearing
global net zero emissions by 2100. However, this isn’t how the statement
has been reported, with several commentators, media outlets and even
one of the presenters alongside Fatih Birol interpreting this as an
agreement to be fossil fuel free by 2100. These are two very different
outcomes for the energy system; the first one potentially feasible and
the second being rather unlikely. Both the Shell Oceans and Mountains
New Lens Scenarios illustrate how a net zero emissions world can potentially evolve,
with extensive use of CCS making room for continued use of fossil fuels
in various applications. The core driver here will be the economics of
the energy system and the competitiveness of fossil fuels and
alternatives across the full spectrum of needs. It is already clear that
alternative energy sources such as solar PV will be very competitive
and could well account for a significant proportion of global
electricity provision. Equally, there are areas where fossil fuels will
be very difficult to displace; I gave one such example in a case study I posted recently on aviation.
Energy demand in certain sectors may well be met by fossil fuels for
all of this century, either with direct use of CCS to deal with the
emissions or, as illustrated in the IPCC 5th Assessment Report, offset
by bio-energy and CCS (BECCS) elsewhere. Unfortunately the nuances of
this issue didn’t make it into the IEA presentation.
That’s it from me for a couple of weeks or so. I am heading north on the National Geographic Explorer to see the Arctic wilderness of Svalbard and Greenland.
http://www.theenergycollective.com/davidhone/2242214/four-demands-paris