The Daily Telegraph

Cop29 is a scam: tech is saving the planet now

Baku is host to some of the world’s most brazen polluters – it is now worse than superfluou­s

- AMBROSE EVANS-PRITCHARD Climate Change · Clean Tech · Ecology · Economics · Energy · Social Sciences · Industries · Brazil · Indonesia · Democratic Republic of Congo · Republic of Congo · Canada · Switzerland · Baku · Exeter · Earth · International Energy Agency · Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development · China · Uruguay · Chile · Kenya · Pacific Ocean · Climate Action Network · Saudi Arabia · United Arab Emirates · Qatar · Kuwait · Iran · European Union · Eu · United Kingdom · Paris Agreement · Paris · University of Exeter · Climate Action

If you wish to see the climate glass as dangerousl­y empty, read this year’s Global Carbon Budget report by 119 global scientists. It sums up the state of the planet in 2024 and will confirm your worst fears.

The stated facts are: CO2 emissions will rise by 0.8pc to 37.4bn tonnes this year. We are still burning more fossil fuels. Coal emissions are up 0.2pc, oil 0.9pc and gas 2.4pc.

Atmospheri­c CO2 levels will rise by 2.8 parts per million to a new record of 422.5, up 52pc since 1850. There is no conceivabl­e chance that we will halve emissions by 2030. Global warming will exceed 1.5C consistent­ly by the early 2030s. “The remaining carbon budget has almost run out,” says the report. The world is still losing forests, mostly in Brazil, Indonesia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, though the pace has been decreasing. Net emissions from “land-use change” added 4.2bn tonnes, made worse by wildfires in Canada’s boreal forests.

A parallel report by the World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on says 2023 and 2024 will be the two warmest years on record. Mean surface temperatur­e from January to September this year was 1.54C above the pre-industrial average, boosted by the temporary effects of El Niño.

Switzerlan­d has lost 10pc of its glaciers over a two-year span. Last year saw the largest loss of global glacier volume ever. Antarctic sea ice reached its lowest extent.

Both reports were released at the anti-western Cop29 summit this week in Baku. The Global Carbon Budget study is led by Exeter University’s Global Systems Institute and involves 80 bodies around the world. One can succumb to doomerism but the glass looks half full if you move from a still shot of where we are to a “second derivative” analysis of where we are going. It is the change in the rate of change that foretells a radically better outcome. The Internatio­nal Energy Agency says $2trillion (£1.6trillion) of annual energy investment is already going into renewables, and just $1 trillion into fossils. Over 90pc of new electricit­y is already green.

Global emissions rose by 2pc a year over the 2000s and 2010s. They have risen at a 0.5pc rate since 2019. They will soon turn negative as catch-up economies follow the falls seen across the OECD over the past 20 years.

Two giant developmen­ts have suddenly changed the equation: China’s emissions (32.2pc of the total) are already peaking, six years ahead of schedule; clean power is now cheaper than fossil power on a pure market basis almost everywhere, a boon for the trade balance and energy security of the fossil-importing countries which make up 80pc of the global population.

The cost of solar panels has fallen 95pc since 2008 in a perfect demonstrat­ion of Wright’s law. China will reach 1,200 gigawatts (GW) of wind and solar this December. It will triple capacity again by 2030 if it continues at the same breakneck pace, more than enough to power its entire economy. Uruguay has achieved 98pc clean power from wind and hydro. Chile has reached 61pc renewable power. Kenya is at 91pc and aiming for 100pc by 2030. China’s economic system is going comprehens­ively electric. Sales of new economic

‘The equation has changed. China’s emissions are already peaking six years ahead of schedule’

vehicles (EVS and plug-in hybrids) continue to hit new records each month. Battery costs halved last year.

Chinese carmakers have cracked cheap and reliable EVS for the mass market. They are moving up the tonnage ladder: almost 10pc of new long-haul lorries are already electric. Anybody who spends time in South East Asia can see that the region is becoming a colony for Chinese EV car plants and sales. China is not acting out of climate altruism. The Communist Party is electrifyi­ng for three reasons: it wants home-grown power beyond a US naval blockade; it has acquired clean-tech supremacy and wishes to exploit the advantage; it wants to dethrone the West’s auto industry.

Technology, markets and superpower rivalry are together bending down the curve of CO2 emissions, too slowly for a 1.5 degree world but perhaps enough for two degrees. What we do not need is the shake-down racket currently on display amid the drilling rigs of Baku, under a petro-strongman who welcomes his French guests with a gratuitous and public broadside over “colonial crimes” in the Pacific.

Progress does not depend on anything done, and even less said, at this degraded venue, an outdated showdown between the West and a victim category of “developing countries” that contains some of the richest and most brazen polluters, or others that persecute climate activists.

The “G77 plus China” group – actually 132 countries – wants $1.3trillion in annual financing and grants as climate debt reparation­s. The Climate Action Network wants $5 trillion. No matter that an audit by Carbon Brief found that $6.5bn of past climate funding was actually used for coal, oil, and gas developmen­t.

The G77 includes Saudi Arabia with per capita emissions of 19.9 tonnes per year, and the Emirates, Qatar and Kuwait with figures that are probably comparable. It includes Iran (9.2), and China (8.3). This compares with the EU (5.6) and Britain (4.5), according to the Global Carbon report.

The original Cop process was necessary to kick-start the clean-tech revolution. The Paris Agreement in 2015 told investors that a regulatory sledgehamm­er was coming down on carbon and that the energy fortunes of the future lay with renewables. It has been a success story but the job is done. Decarbonis­ation is irreversib­le. The Cop process is now worse than superfluou­s: it has become a cynical exercise in moral blackmail against the West, the same creative West that invented the technologi­es now saving everybody. Let it wither on the vine.

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