Whanganui Chronicle

Ingenuity may be answer to warming

- Richard Prebble

Maybe this is how the world ends, not with a whimper but a shambles. Sharm el-Sheikh is an appropriat­e place to hold a climate conference; the whole place is a climate warning. It’s an Egyptian Las Vegas with a casino and the world’s largest artificial lagoon. The city’s carbon emissions must be enormous.

I am staying in a huge resort hotel. All the tourists, usually Germans sunbathing, had their reservatio­ns cancelled to make room for COP delegates. Amongst the guests I recognise bureaucrat­s, NGO staffers and consultant­s. The resort during the day is empty. No one is sunbathing by the pools. Everyone is at COP27.

We might be the only tourists in the hotel. The wedding I came for is cancelled because other guests had their reservatio­ns revoked. The Egyptian wedding guests could not get permission to travel here. Police and roadblocks are everywhere.

Maybe my reservatio­n was not cancelled because everyone assumes I am a delegate. I was asked if I was the German Minister of Agricultur­e. In Cairo, despite my denial, officials showed me to the front of the queue boarding the plane. Any time saved was lost when our plane circled Sharm el-Sheikh Airport for over an hour. We were kept waiting by Air Force One carrying Joe Biden.

COP27’s new initiative is to create a fund for loss and damage. It is like the Titanic passengers demanding compensati­on for water damage to luggage rather than insisting the ship misses the iceberg. Any compensati­on will never be more than a gesture. It was disappoint­ing to see New Zealand support this nonsense but then our Government loves gestures.

The message from COP27 is if we are relying on the politician­s there is no way global warming will be limited to 1.5C.

There is also hope at COP27.

The best way to envisage COP27 is it is like a festival surrounded by fringe festivals and stalls selling things. All sorts are making pitches for their “sustainabl­e” solutions.

Iwi are here, with some Pacific Island representa­tion at the Hinemoana Halo Climate Investment Forum, pitching their proposals to combat global warming. The forum is sponsored by Conservati­on Internatio­nal, an American nonprofit. Harrison Ford is vice-chairman. They fund conservati­on initiative­s. Huge investment funds exist to fund technology to mitigate global warming. COP27 is the forum where the promoters meet the funders.

I went to the Hinemoana Halo forum. Here are three iwi proposals:

Seagrass is a better absorber of carbon than trees. Seaweed can be planted. Iwi want to plant seagrass “fields” and get the carbon credits. Trials are being conducted. What is needed is a legal framework and a regulatory system so seagrass fields can be owned, protected and the carbon credits created traded. You do not want someone bottom trawling through your seagrass field. Iwi’s solution is to claim the sea floor. To get investment to create fields we need something like the fishing quota, with a quota reserved for Mā ori, to give an ownership right to harvest the sea floor.

Pacific Island nations, far from being the victims of climate change, may be huge beneficiar­ies. The PM of the Bahamas who is leading the call for compensati­on, is the leader of the nation surrounded by the world’s biggest seagrass field.

New Zealand does not get recognitio­n for our pine forest absorbing carbon because when the tree is harvested the carbon is released. Half of the tree is off-cuts.

Iwi are significan­t forest owners. One iwi has been using some of its settlement money to investigat­e whether the wood waste can be refined to produce a range of products including a biofuel.

For those who want to save the whales, here is a new reason. Whales eat plankton that in turn eats diatoms that absorb CO2. A 30-tonne whale is a living carbon sink. When the whale dies it sinks to the bottom of the ocean where carbon cannot return to the atmosphere.

The presentati­on claimed “over the course of their lifetime, a great whale sequesters approximat­ely 33 tonnes of CO2, equivalent to 30,000 trees, and . . . if whales were to return to their former abundance, they could capture approximat­ely 1.7 billion tonnes of CO2 annually”.

The iwi are seeking $170 million for their fund, good luck with that.

I do not know the proposals’ merits. These are a few solutions from Mā ori. The whole world is applying its mind to climate change. Imagine how many clever ideas there are.

If we are going to beat global warming it will be by ingenuity.

WHAT DO YOU THINK?

Email letters@ whanganuic­hronicle. co.nz to have your

say.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? The sun sets behind signage for the COP27 UN Climate Summit in Sharm elSheikh, Egypt, yesterday. Envisage the summit as akin to a festival surrounded by fringe festivals and stalls selling things.
Photo / AP The sun sets behind signage for the COP27 UN Climate Summit in Sharm elSheikh, Egypt, yesterday. Envisage the summit as akin to a festival surrounded by fringe festivals and stalls selling things.

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