Business Day

Carbon emissions falling as Covid-19 halts manufactur­ing

- Shadia Nasralla, Valerie Volcovici and Matthew Green London/Washington

IT’S A SMALL DROP, BUT ANY NEWS IS GOOD NEWS, OTHERS NOTE IT PROVES THAT GREENHOUSE GASES ARE CAUSED BY HUMAN ACTIVITY

Carbon dioxide emissions could fall by the largest amount since World War 2 in 2020 as the coronaviru­s outbreak brings economies to a virtual standstill, according to the chair of a network of scientists providing benchmark emissions data.

Rob Jackson, who chairs the Global Carbon Project, which produces widely watched annual emissions estimates, said carbon output could fall more than 5% year on year — the first dip since a 1.4% reduction after the 2008 financial crisis.

“I wouldn’t be shocked to see a 5% or more drop in carbon dioxide emissions this year, something not seen since the end of World War 2,” Jackson, a professor of Earth system science at Stanford University in California, said. “Neither the fall of the Soviet Union nor the various oil or savings and loan crises of the past 50 years are likely to have affected emissions the way this crisis is.”

The prediction — among a range of new forecasts being produced by climate researcher­s — represents a tiny sliver of good news in the midst of crisis: climate scientists had warned world government­s that global emissions must start dropping by 2020 to avoid the worst affects of climate change.

But the improvemen­ts are for all the wrong reasons, tied to a world-shaking global health emergency that has infected more than 1-million people, while shuttering factories, grounding airlines and forcing hundreds of millions of people to stay at home to slow the contagion.

Experts warn that, without structural change, the emissions declines caused by Covid-19 could be short-lived and have little effect on the concentrat­ions of carbon dioxide that have accumulate­d in the atmosphere over decades.

“This drop is not due to structural changes so as soon as confinemen­t ends, I expect the emissions will go back close to where they were,” said Corinne Le Quéré, a climate scientist at the University of East Anglia in England.

After world greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions dipped in the aftermath of the 2007/2008 global financial crisis, they shot back up a whopping 5.1% in the recovery, according to Jackson.

The pattern of a swift rebound has already begun to play out in China, where emissions fell an estimated 25% as the country closed factories and put in place strict measures on people’s movement to contain the coronaviru­s earlier this year, but have since returned to a normal range.

That kind of resilience underscore­s the magnitude of the economic transforma­tion that would be needed to meet the goals of an internatio­nal deal brokered in Paris in 2015 to try to avert the most catastroph­ic climate change scenarios.

A UN report published in November found that emissions would have to start falling an average of 7.6% per year to give the world a viable chance of limiting the rise in average global temperatur­es to 1.5ºC, the most ambitious Paris goal.

“I don’t see any way that this is good news except for proving that humans drive GHG emissions,” said Kristopher Karnauskas, associate professor at the department of atmospheri­c and oceanic sciences at the University of Colorado Boulder.

With the world dependent for fossil fuels for 80% of its energy, emissions forecasts are often based on projection­s for global economic growth.

In March, Glen Peters, research director of the Centre for Internatio­nal Climate Research in Oslo, predicted carbon emissions would fall between 0.3% and 1.2% in 2020, using higher and lower forecasts for global GDP growth from the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t.

A few days later, the Breakthrou­gh Institute, a research centre in California, predicted emissions will decline 0.5%-2.2%, basing its calculatio­ns on growth forecasts from JPMorgan, and assuming the global economy recovers in the second half.

“Our estimates indicate that the pandemic’s climate silver lining is vanishingl­y thin,” said Seaver Wang, a climate and energy analyst at the institute. “It’s as if we went back in time and emitted the same amount we were a few years ago — which was already too much. In the grand scheme of things, it really makes no difference.”

Some foresee a bigger hit to the economy. The Londonbase­d Centre for Economics and Business Research estimates that world GDP will fall at least 4% in 2020 — albeit with a “huge margin of error”.

That drop would be more than twice as large as the contractio­n during the financial crisis, and the largest annual fall in GDP since 1931, barring war time, the centre said.

With government­s launching gigantic stimulus packages to stop their economies collapsing, investors are now watching to see how far the US, and China, the EU, Japan and others embrace lower-emission energy sources.

“Even if there is a decline in emissions in 2020, let’s say 10% or 20%, it’s not negligible, it’s important, but from a climate point of view, it would be a small dent if emissions go back to pre-coronaviru­s crisis levels in 2021,” said Pierre Friedlings­tein, chair in mathematic­al modeling of the climate system at the University of Exeter in England.

Said Dan Lashof, US director at the World Resources Institute: “This is why it is important to think about the nature of the economic stimulus packages around the world as countries come out of the most immediate health crisis.”

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