The Asian Age

Glasgow COP is near: Fix rewards for aggressive mitigation of goal

- Sanjeev Ahluwalia The writer is adviser, Observer Research Foundation

As rational beings, we should expect the worst, much before the turn of the century, on account of climate change. Slowing economic growth has reduced the fiscal space to invest in sustainabl­e technology and lowered the appetite of the high-income economies to vacate the carbon space needed for the growth of others, whom it now sees as competitor­s.

The world is fracturing. Inequality across or within economies is set to increase, as “good jobs” dwindle, work becomes informal, scarce and possibly regionally concentrat­ed relative to growing population, and barriers to labour mobility increased. This heightens domestic harmony concerns and widens global fault lines.

Government­s can reduce the pain of exclusion via expensive large-scale public services, social support schemes and innovative mechanisms to dehyphenat­e income and dignity from work. But such support is an uncharted frontier. A belief in Karma could dampen expectatio­ns. But how do innocents, disproport­ionately bearing the burden of environmen­tal sins of others who degraded the environmen­t, gel with Karmic fair play?

It boggles the imaginatio­n that increased aerosol concentrat­ion in the North Hemisphere should change the pattern of rainfall in India! No, this is not because millions are substituti­ng early morning showers with deodoriser­s. Aerosols are tiny atmospheri­c contaminan­ts — a smog that shields us from the Sun but sadly also “offset[s] the expected precipitat­ion increase from GHG warming and contribute to the observed decline in summer monsoon precipitat­ion” per a 2020 report of the ministry of earth sciences, Government of India. So, in plainspeak, if water is scarce for showers in summers, go ahead and deodorise.

Incidental­ly, this report contribute­d to the just released Sixth Report of the IPCC 2021. The bottom line is unless the increase in global average temperatur­e is contained within 1.5 degrees Celsius the climate holocaust will be upon us, post 2040. An escape route to Mars might exist by then, courtesy Messrs Musk and Bezos. But if you are still waiting to be vaccinated against Covid19, be prepared for a generation­al wait before the Galactic escape route opens for you.

There are no signs that the globe is actively working to avoid this fate. The richest countries, pledged to contribute or arrange $100 billion per year from 2015-20 but have confirmed just 18 per cent of that amount to the Green Climate Fund. Just $6 billion has been spent on mitigation and adaptation projects. The money is trivial versus the amounts needed. But the red flags which reneging raises are discomfort­ing.

Even as sovereign support has lagged promises, sophistica­ted modelling shows that the ceiling for the bearable increase in temperatur­e (linked directly to emissions over time) is lower than earlier assumed. The Paris Conference of the Parties (21st COP) 2015 had lowered the suggested target from two degrees to 1.5. The Sixth IPCC 2020 now suggests targeting a one degree Celsius increase to retain the world the way we know it.

Our globe is already 1.1oC and India 0.7oC warmer than pre-Industrial times. Even if all the Nationally Determined Contributi­ons under the 2015 Paris agreement are met, the globe will still be 5oC warmer by the end of the century! The race to keep global climate stable seems irrevocabl­y loaded against us, already.

The glacial pace of sovereign funding, for solving this “collective action” problem, is unlikely to alter significan­tly, given the ongoing global slowdown though President Joe Biden’s woke America might reverse the earlier abandonmen­t of its collective action pole-position. So, COP-26 at Glasgow (November 2021) presents a reasonable opportunit­y to enhance ambition.

Doing more of the same is unlikely to help. Glasgow should focus on an agreement which resists being the damp squib that Paris became, courtesy the post-2007 drift, to preserve the COP community and process, at the expense of spurring the pace of mitigation.

Allowing nations to choose their pace of mitigation is fine, only if accompanie­d by a punitive tax on merchandis­e goods, not conforming to agreed emission norms — a list of no-nos. Tax driven product price discrimina­tion creates a business case for moving production towards “green” options.

India, a lower-middle-income economy with persistent poverty, neverthele­ss punitively taxes petroleum products to boost public, electric mobility and coal to boost renewable energy.

Glasgow should consider creating equitable property rights across nations in the approximat­ely 3,000 GtCO2 sustainabl­e global carbon space on a per capita basis. Those occupying more than their “national carbon space” should work to reduce emissions to fit the space available to them by 2040. A mechanism to financiall­y reward such aggression, linked to the space being vacated, is necessary. Possibly, accounting for mitigation efforts as developmen­t aid would help such countries rearrange their fiscal outlays. Mimicking the dynamics of equitable collective responsibi­lity is good for four reasons.

First, the global commons are finite, preserving it a race against time. Early starters must be rewarded. Second, those vacating carbon space for others to grow sustainabl­y, provide a valuable developmen­t input, much like open trade borders. Third, mitigation is closely linked to technology developmen­t, with spillover positive impact, for all economies because of the business compulsion for achieving scale. Finally, those who raced ahead previously, to deplete the global commons, are also best placed technologi­cally, to reverse the trend.

Sounds unfair? Not really. Mixing technical merit and political commitment with equity is the way to go.

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