Otago Daily Times

Forget Trump, world must keep fighting global warming

- Gwynne Dyer is an independen­t London journalist.

‘‘P ROMOTING coal at a climate summit is like promoting tobacco at a cancer summit,’’ said former New York mayor Michael Bloomberg, but President Donald J. Trump did exactly that. He sent a team of American diplomats and energy executives to the annual world climate summit in Bonn, Germany, to extol the wonders of ‘‘clean’’ coal.

Bloomberg, now a UN special envoy for climate change, got it right. The audience at the US presentati­on heckled and mocked the presenters. Where people who were concerned about global warming once worried about whether the US Government would dare to defy the fossil fuel lobby at home, the denialists now control the Government — and it turns out not to matter all that much.

There are several reasons for that. One is that global coal use has gone into steep decline as the cost of renewable energy has dropped. It’s just not competitiv­e any more, and China and India have cancelled plans for hundreds of new coalfired power plants this year. Even in the United States, the share of electricit­y coming from coal fell from 51% in 2008 to only 31% last year — and US coal companies are going bankrupt.

A second reason is that Trump’s decision to pull the United States out of the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement has had zero impact internatio­nally. The fear other countries would also default on their commitment­s proved unfounded, and the US is literally the only country on the planet that does not subscribe to the treaty.

Indeed, Christiana Figueres, the UN’s chief climate negotiator, actually thanked Trump for his attempt to wreck the Paris deal.

‘‘It provoked an unparallel­led wave of support for the treaty,’’ she said. ‘‘He shored up the world’s resolve on climate action, and for that we can all be grateful.’’

Finally, Trump has been outflanked by a new alliance announced in Bonn on Monday that links the 15 US states committed to strong climate action with the Canadian and Mexican government­s in a continentw­ide group that concentrat­es on phasing out coal power and boosting clean power and transport. Much of the US contributi­on to emissions cuts that Trump reneged on will be covered by these statelevel American initiative­s.

There are other causes for alarm, of course. There always are. After three years when global carbon dioxide emissions stayed steady, albeit at a very high level, they have started rising again. And there is an unexplaine­d rise in methane emissions in the tropics, not caused by burning fossil fuels, that leads some scientists to suspect one of the dreaded feedbacks is kicking in.

Feedbacks are the spectre at the feast. You can get everything else right, your emissions are going down nicely, and you are on course to stop the warming just before the average global temperatur­e reaches 2degC higher — and then suddenly, the whole global system goes into overdrive. The warming human beings have already caused has triggered some other, natural source of warming we cannot shut off.

The consensus among scientists is that the risk of triggering feedbacks rises steeply in the vicinity of a 2degC rise in average global temperatur­e, which is why the world’s government­s have all promised never to exceed that target. But there could be some unknown trigger in the system that would set off runaway warming at a significan­tly lower average global temperatur­e; the whole process, as they say, is ‘‘nonlinear’’.

So we are still living dangerousl­y, and it is still uncertain whether we can ratchet down emissions targets fast enough to stop the temperatur­e rise in time. But there are big changes in the offing that will make it easier to cut emissions: meat substitute­s and labgrown meat, electric vehicles, and rapidly falling prices for renewables like solar and wind.

There is also now a unity of purpose previously absent from the climate talks: the long struggle between the rich and the poor countries over who is to blame for the problem and who pays for the damage is largely over. And although President Xi did not come in person, China is definitely taking the lead.

Nobody in Bonn is celebratin­g the US Government’s defection from the fight against climate change, but their panic is long past. The Bonn meeting is concentrat­ing on writing the rules for measuring how countries are complying with the promises they have made on emissions cuts. They also need to figure out how to organise the fiveyearly reviews at which the countries are supposed to adopt progressiv­ely higher targets for cuts.

When the conference closes tomorrow, there will be no exciting new announceme­nts of breakthrou­ghs, but we don’t need that. The real breakthrou­gh came in Paris in 2015, and the objective now is to keep the show on the road. So far, so good.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Demonstrat­ors dress as US president Donald Trump and polar bears during a demonstrat­ion in Bonn last week against the COP 23 UN Climate Change Conference hosted by Fiji but held in Germany.
PHOTO: REUTERS Demonstrat­ors dress as US president Donald Trump and polar bears during a demonstrat­ion in Bonn last week against the COP 23 UN Climate Change Conference hosted by Fiji but held in Germany.
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