Western Mail

Virus may be turning point for world to act on climate change

Could Covid-19 prove to be a pivotal moment in the world’s fight against climate change? Scientists based at the Global Carbon Project and universiti­es in the UK, USA, Holland and Norway have released their latest research

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THE numbers of people cycling and walking in public spaces during Covid-19 has skyrockete­d. Cities from Bogota to Berlin and Vancouver have expanded bike lanes and public paths to accommodat­e the extra cycling traffic. In Australia, the New South Wales government is encouragin­g councils to follow suit.

Mandatory social distancing under Covid-19 is disrupting the way we live and work, creating new lifestyle patterns. But once the crisis is over, will – and should – the picture return to normal?

That’s one of many key questions emerging as the precise effect of the pandemic on carbon emissions becomes clear.

Our research published in Nature Climate Change shows how Covid19 has affected global emissions in six economic sectors. We discovered a significan­t decline in daily global emissions – most markedly on April 7.

The analysis is useful as we consider the deep structural change needed to shift the global economy to zero emissions.

Take, for example, our quieter streets. The fall in road traffic was a main driver of the global emissions decline. So if we encourage cycling and working from home to continue beyond the current pandemic, our climate goals will become far more achievable.

At the end of each year we publish the Global Carbon Budget – a report card on global and regional carbon trends. But the unusual circumstan­ces this year prompted us to run a preliminar­y analysis.

We calculated how the pandemic influenced daily carbon dioxide emissions in 69 countries covering 97% of global emissions and six economic sectors.

It required collecting new, highly detailed data in different ways, and from diverse sources.

For example, we examined surface and air transport activity using data from TomTom and Apple iPhone direction requests, highway traffic records and airport departures. We used daily data to estimate changes in electricit­y usage.

And we built an index showing the level and size of the population under confinemen­t in each country, to extrapolat­e the available data worldwide.

In early April, the reduction in global activity peaked. On April 7, global emissions were 17% lower than an equivalent day in 2019.

Total daily emissions in early April were similar to those observed in 2006. The fact that the world now emits as much under “lockdown” conditions as it did under normal conditions just 14 years ago underscore­s the rapid emissions growth in that time.

Road traffic contribute­d the most to the emissions decline (43%). The next biggest contributo­rs were the power sector (electricit­y and heat) and industry (manufactur­ing and material production such as cement and steel). These three sectors combined were responsibl­e for 86% of the fall in daily emissions.

The peak daily fall in global aviation activity (60%) was the largest of any sector we analysed. But aviation’s contributi­on to the overall fall in emissions was relatively small (10%) because it makes up just 3% of global emissions.

As people stayed at home, we found a small increase in global emissions from the residentia­l sector.

In Australia, the widespread, highlevel confinemen­t triggered an estimated fall in peak daily emissions of 28% – two-thirds larger than the global estimate of 17%.

We assessed how the pandemic will affect carbon dioxide emissions over the rest of 2020. Obviously, this will depend on how strong the restrictio­ns are in coming months, and how long they last.

If widespread global confinemen­t ends in mid-June, we estimate overall carbon emissions in 2020 will fall about 4% compared to 2019. If less severe restrictio­ns remain in place for the rest of the year, the reduction would be about 7%.

If we consider the various pandemic scenarios and uncertaint­ies in the data, the full range of emissions decline is 2% to 13%.

Now for the important context. Under the Paris climate agreement and according to the United Nations Gap report, global emissions must fall by between 3% and 7% each year between now and 2030 to limit climate change well below 2°C and 1.5°C, respective­ly.

Under our projected emissions drop, the world could meet this target in 2020 – albeit for the wrong reasons.

Stabilisin­g the global climate system will require extraordin­ary changes to our energy and economic systems, comparable to the disruption brought by Covid-19.

So how could we make this byproduct of the crisis – the emissions decline in 2020 – a turning point?

A slow economic recovery might lower emissions for a few years. But if previous global economic crises are any indication, emissions will bounce back from previous lows.

But it need not be this way. The recent forced disruption offers an opportunit­y to change the structures underpinni­ng our energy and economic systems. This could set us on the path to decarbonis­ing the global economy.

Let’s consider again the extra people now walking and riding bikes. What if government­s took the chance now to support such active, low-emissions travel and make it permanent? What if we accelerate the roll-out of electric cars, bikes and scooters, to both broaden transport options and save lives through cleaner city air?

Encouragin­gly, the New South Wales government in Australia recently announced a A$15m fund to help councils create bigger public thoroughfa­res and extra road crossings during the crisis. If the community embraces the changes, they may become permanent.

And Paris will invest €300m into a 650km bicycle network post-lockdown, including new “pop-up” cycleways establishe­d during the pandemic.

The crisis has opened the way for other structural change. People and businesses have been able to test what travel is essential, and when alternativ­e remote communicat­ion might be equally or more efficient.

Finally, energy and material consumptio­n dropped during Covid-19. While such forced reductions are not a long-term answer to reducing greenhouse gas emissions, lower consumptio­n can be achieved in other ways, such as new types of energy efficiency, that allow both environmen­tally sustainabl­e developmen­t and rising wellbeing, incomes and activity.

We can rapidly return to the old “normal” and the emissions pathway will follow suit. But if we choose otherwise, 2020 could be the unsolicite­d jolt that turns the global emissions trend around.

■ This article, which first appeared on www.theconvers­ation.com, was written by Dr Pep Canadell, Prof Corinne Le Quéré, Dr Felix Creutzig, Dr Glen Peters, Dr Matthew William Jones, Prof Pierre Friedlings­tein, Prof Rob Jackson and Dr Yuli Shan.

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