The Star Early Edition

Rise again in carbon emissions

- SHANNON EBRAHIM GROUP FOREIGN EDITOR debashinse­h.athnannogn­a.evberloa@hiimnl@.cion.lz.cao.za

GLOBAL CO2 emissions mainly caused by burning fossil fuels are set to rebound in 2021 to levels seen before the Covid-19 pandemic, according to an assessment published yesterday that served as a “reality check” to vague decarbonis­ation pledges at a UN climate summit.

Overall, CO2 pollution this year will be just shy of the record set in 2019, according to the annual report from the Global Carbon Project consortium, released as nearly 200 nations at the COP26 climate summit confront the threat of catastroph­ic warming.

Emissions from gas and highly polluting coal will rise this year by more than they dropped in 2020, when shutdowns to slow the spread of the pandemic caused economies to slow dramatical­ly.

Capping the rise in global temperatur­e to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels, as per the Paris Agreement, would limit mortality and damage, but achieving that goal would require slashing carbon emissions nearly in half by 2030 and to net zero by 2050, the UN’s climate science authority warned.

“This report is a reality check,” said co-author Corrine Le Quere, a professor of climate change science at Britain’s University of East Anglia. “It shows what’s happening in the real world while we are here in Glasgow talking about tackling climate change.”

The new report is bad news for the 13-day COP26 meeting, where a diplomatic spat saw the US accuse China and Russia of failing to step up their ambitions. China will account for 31% of global emissions this year after its economy accelerate­d out of the economic lull ahead of others.

Carbon pollution from oil remains well below 2019 levels, but could surge as the transport and aviation sectors recover from pandemic disruption, said the study in the journal Earth System Science Data. Taken together, the findings mean that future C02 emissions could eclipse the 40-billion

ton record set in 2019, which some have predicted would be a peak.

The latest figures are in line with a recent Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) forecast that emissions from energy would hit an all-time high in 2023, “with no clear peak in sight”.

“Perhaps we will start talking about peak emissions in 2023 or 2024,” said Glen Peters, research director at the Centre for Internatio­nal Climate Research in Oslo and a co-author of the report.

Looking at the national level, the report found a return to pre-Covid-19 patterns among the world top four carbon polluters, which account for 60% of global CO2 emissions. In China, which has pledged to peak its emissions

by 2030, and reach net-zero by 2060, economic growth spurred by government incentives will see emissions grow 5.5% this year compared with 2019, the last year not affected by Covid-19.

India, the world’s other emerging giant, is on track for a similar percentage increase in carbon pollution, and will account for seven percent of the total this year. Emissions in the US and EU will drop 3.7% and 4.2% this year respective­ly and their share of global emissions will stand at 14% and 7%.

The wild card that could determine how quickly the world can finally bend the emissions downward is coal, the report said. “Mostly it’s about coal now,” said Le Quere. “This is where

the big uncertaint­ies are.” Very little of the trillions of dollars channelled to post-pandemic recovery was earmarked for green developmen­t, a trend that is continuing, she said. “Economic incentives now are about driving consumptio­n, and this is really pushing industry, production and coal.”

Worldwide, decarbonis­ation continues to be outpaced by the demand for energy. But the report highlighte­d some positive signs.

Twenty-three countries accounting for a quarter of global emissions over the last decade – including the US, Japan, Germany, France and Britain – enjoyed strong economic growth alongside significan­t declines in emissions. But the finding makes clear how daunting the Paris Agreement goals are. Peter Norton, director of Internatio­nal Institute for Environmen­t and Developmen­t, said the report showed that on current emissions levels the world would emit enough to breach the 1.5C goal within 11 years.

“That is in many ways worse than it sounds,” he said.

At the summit in Glasgow yesterday, Britain’s COP26 president Alok Sharma said, “the end of coal is in sight”, hailing deals to end internatio­nal coal financing and phase out domestic coal power.

Government representa­tives at the conference made a raft of new pledges aimed at curbing production and use of oil, gas and coal. But the pledges could also highlight lingering divisions between wealthy nations pushing for a swift end to the dirty fuels of the industrial revolution, and poorer developing countries that rely on coal and other fossil fuels to grow.

Poland, Vietnam, Chile and other countries pledged to phase out coalfuelle­d power generation and stop building new plants in a deal that would commit 190 nations and organisati­ons to quit the fuel.

At least 19 countries – including major emitters the US and Canada – commited to stop public financing for fossil fuel projects abroad by the end of next year. More countries also may join the Beyond Oil and Gas Alliance, led by Denmark and Costa Rica, which commits members to phasing out fossil fuel production within their own borders. Coal fires around 37% of the world’s electricit­y.

Net-zero emissions pledges and a commitment at the conference to cut methane will push the world close to limiting global warming to below 2°C, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said yesterday, meaning the summit was approachin­g the goals of 2015 Paris agreement – to limit the global average temperatur­e rise to below 2°C above pre-industrial levels and make efforts to limit it to 1.5C.

 ?? | Reuters ?? SMOKE and steam billow from Europe’s largest coal-fired power plant near Belchatow, Poland. Emissions will rise this year by more than they dropped in 2020, researcher­s said. Global efforts towards cutting emissions is being outpaced by the demand for energy.
| Reuters SMOKE and steam billow from Europe’s largest coal-fired power plant near Belchatow, Poland. Emissions will rise this year by more than they dropped in 2020, researcher­s said. Global efforts towards cutting emissions is being outpaced by the demand for energy.

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