The Jerusalem Post

Bill to mitigate climate change damage advances

Country expected to see rise in heat waves, fires, flash floods

- • By KEREN SETTON

Anyone living in Israel in recent decades has felt the scorching heat getting even hotter.

Summer heat waves now last longer and electricit­y consumptio­n records are broken every year.

The data support that sweaty feeling. And according to the Israel Meteorolog­ical Service, the average temperatur­e in the country will rise by 4° Celsius (7.2° Fahrenheit) by the end of the current century, double the global forecast.

In the coming years, Israel is expected to experience more heat waves, fires, flash floods and other extreme weather conditions.

Before attending the 2021 UN Nations Climate Change Conference, Prime Minister Naftali Bennett approved a plan in October for Israel to combat climate change.

“The climate crisis is one of the major issues on the world agenda,” he said. “It concerns the lives of all of us, and also the lives of our children and grandchild­ren. We are obligated to deal with it in Israel; it is at the core of our being.”

Fast forward to last Sunday, when the Ministeria­l Committee for Legislatio­n approved Israel’s first Climate Bill. It is expected to be brought to a vote in the Knesset in the coming weeks.

“This is a historic moment,” Environmen­tal Protection Minister Tamar Zandberg said in a statement given to The Media Line.

But there are questions as to whether the proposal is sufficient to tackle this complex, multi-faceted issue.

The draft law is supposed to put the energy, industry, agricultur­e and transporta­tion sectors under the same obligation­s as they work towards both making Israel a carbon-neutral economy and fighting the climate crisis on a national level.

The government set a goal of reaching net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, and drasticall­y reducing them before that, cutting emissions by at least 27% by 2030.

“It is true there is a gap to close. I think we need to increase the goals to at least 40% in 2030 and I will continue to fight for this,”

Zandberg said in her statement.

Unnamed finance ministry officials were quoted in the Israeli media as criticizin­g the bill for fear the government and large industries would be restricted in their activities.

Attorney Tammy Gannot Rosenstrei­ch, deputy executive director of the Israel Union for Environmen­tal Defense, said: “Even in its current format, the law completely changes the status of climate change in Israel by legislatio­n and making it something that can be enforced, with concrete commitment­s. It symbolizes a new era for Israel.”

The draft legislatio­n includes concrete milestones along the way, a compromise between the two ministries.

“I am surprised that any environmen­tal expert could be satisfied,” said MK Alon Tal, founder of the Israel Union for Environmen­tal Defense and of the Arava Institute for Environmen­tal Studies. “The law is inadequate and anemic relative to the standards that have emerged internatio­nally. It is a product of a painful compromise.”

“It is obvious the law needs to be more ambitious,” said Gannot Rosenstrei­ch.

The bill has no specific goals for the use of renewable energies. Israel appears to be going in the opposite direction of much of the developed world, increasing its dependency on natural gas and constantly stretching the limit on electricit­y, while still using coal as an energy source. Plans for the constructi­on of a new power plant based on natural gas have been criticized by environmen­talists.

Tal hopes to amend the bill, “to restore some of the vitality and integrity of the original draft.”

Despite the ambitious goal, Israel is still lagging behind most Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t countries, in both its goals and implementa­tion.

“There is not enough understand­ing of the scope of the problem,” said Dr. Avner Gross, from the School of Sustainabi­lity and Climate Change at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Beersheba.

While Israel may perceive itself as a small country with little impact on the global environmen­t, its geographic­al position makes it highly susceptibl­e

to the adverse effects of climate change.

Indeed, Israel’s greenhouse gas emissions in 2020 accounted for 0.16% of global CO2 emissions, according to the Global Carbon Project. However, in CO2 emissions per capita, Israel ranks higher than countries similar in size and population.

“We know how to create economic incentives and regulatory devices to reduce our carbon footprint dramatical­ly,” Tal told The Media Line. “This climate law lacks vision and makes no mention of any economic instrument­s.”

He suggests a carbon tax on gas but also on beef.

The warning signs are already here.

Gross said: “Due to its geographic­al location, Israel is highly sensitive to climate change and could be much harder hit by the climate crisis than other countries. It has an obligation not to wait for others to take steps. This will be a national security threat to Israel that is no less a threat than the Iranian one.”

Zandberg said: “This is a plan to reduce emissions, but the plan for preparedne­ss is no less important. It is important that Israel takes part in reducing global gas emissions, but it is more important that it protects its citizens from the consequenc­es of the climate crisis that are expected to hit harsher here than in other countries.

“This plan will guarantee Israel’s climate immunity in the next decades and reduce the risks that come with climate change in the country,” she said.

Israel’s arid climate is expected to worsen as the Sahara Desert in North Africa pushes its boundaries ever closer because of global warming.

“The main thing that needs to be done is to reach the understand­ing that this is an existentia­l crisis and by treating it as one, Israel needs to allocate much more resources to deal with the problem,” said Gross.

“We are the first generation to recognize climate change and the last one that can do something to stop it,” said Tal.

The consequenc­es of desertific­ation are grave.

According to Gross, if immediate action is not taken, Israel will have 20% to 30% less rainfall by the end of the century. Not only will the country be much hotter, but food supplies will also be reduced. A massive flow of refugees could take place from neighborin­g countries with soaring temperatur­es and limited access to water. As temperatur­es soar, it will be harder for people in the Middle East to survive. This will create new geopolitic­al challenges in an already volatile region.

Israel also faces rising sea levels that will make living in areas next to the sea increasing­ly difficult.

Assuming the Knesset approves the law, it will still take time to implement it.

Under the legislatio­n, a Ministeria­l Committee on Climate Affairs will be establishe­d and chaired by the prime minister.

Israel, with its thriving hi-tech innovation sector, has the potential to be a world leader in solutions for the myriad issues climate change causes.

The existence of the bill, regardless of its weak points, leave room for optimism, activists say.

“A few years ago, we couldn’t even imagine such a law in Israel,” said Gross. “The next decade will be the climate decade.”

 ?? (Michael Giladi/Flash90) ?? UNUSUALLY STRONG winds that whipped up the waters in Sea of Galilee in the early hours of Sunday caused huge damage to the promenade in Tiberias.
(Michael Giladi/Flash90) UNUSUALLY STRONG winds that whipped up the waters in Sea of Galilee in the early hours of Sunday caused huge damage to the promenade in Tiberias.

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