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Explore the concept of progress in global climate negotiations with the Copenhagen Accord, countries' emission targets, and lessons learned from Copenhagen. Understand a proposal for setting practical emission targets based on political feasibility, addressing fairness and economic concerns.
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After Copenhagen Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor, Harvard Kennedy School HUCE, March 2, 2010
2 Questions • Copenhagen Accord = Progress? • Proposalfor a Global Climate Agreement: How to Set Emission Targets by Formula • Appendix: CountryEmission Targets
1. Progress?What is the definition? • It is useless to evaluate negotiations by whether or not they produce a sweeping agreement. • Always keep in mind the Herculean tasks of bridging • the gap between rich countries & poor, • the gap between environmental aspirations & economic costs that people are willing to pay, • the gap between what leaders are willing to say, &what commitments are enforceable and credible. • Progress ≡ steps toward specific credible commitments by a large number of countries.
The best recent news • 102 countries (81% of global emissions), responded to the Jan.31, 2010, deadline of the Copenhagen Accord by submitting plans for reducing emissions. • Six big non-Annex I countries named quantitative targets • They didn’t have to. • Of course many, like China, are vague • about base year and seriousness of commitment • India & China’s 2020 target ≈ BAU. • But that is not a problem. (It is what I had proposed.) • It is an important step forward, • suggesting that Pres. Obama’s in-person breakthrough on the last day of COP15 may indeed lead somewhere.
Emissions targets taken on under Copenhagen Accord(Jan 31, 2010 deadline) 5
Emissions targets taken on under Copenhagen Accord(Jan 31, 2010 deadline) 6
Lessons from Copenhagen • Progress is not possible in the UN Framework • Small member countries will obstruct. • Delays due to walkout; • 6 trouble-maker countries blocked adoption of “Copenhagen Accord.” • The UNFCCC Secretariat is not up to it: • Leaving 38,000-44,000 registrees out in the cold is unforgivable incompetence. • The important decisions can only be made by a small steering group, like the old G-7.
2009’s good global governance development: • Big emerging market countries finally have representation, • now that the G-20 has supplanted the G-8. • Korea chairs the G-20 in 2010, and may be able to bridge between Annex I & developing countries. • Big Emitters Forum • Mexico hosts next climate summit.
2. Proposal: formulas for pragmatic targets, based on what emission paths are possible politically: • unlike other approaches based purely on: • Science (concentration goals), • Ethics (equal emission rights per capita), • or Economics (cost-benefit optimization). • Why the political approach? • Countries will not accept burdens that they view as unfair. • Above certain thresholds for economic costs, they will drop out.
Proposal Stage 2:When the time comes for developing country cuts, targets are determined by a formula incorporating 3 elements, designed so each is asked only to take actions analogous to those already taken by others: • Stage 1: • Annex I countries commit to the post-2012 targets that their leaders have already announced. • Others commit immediately not to exceed BAU. • a Progressive Reduction Factor, • a Latecomer Catch-up Factor, and • a Gradual Equalization Factor.
◙ In one version, concentrations level off at 500 ppm in the latter part of the century. ◙ Constraints are satisfied: -- No country in any one period suffers a loss as large as 5% of GDP by participating. -- Present Discounted Value of loss < 1% GDP. Co-author: V.Bosetti Global peak date ≈ 2035
Paper:http://ksghome.harvard.edu/~jfrankel/SpecificTargetsHPICA2009.docAvailable at: http://ksghome.harvard.edu/~jfrankel/currentpubsspeeches.htm#On%20Climate%20Change
AppendicesThe targeted reductions from BAU agreed to at Kyoto in 1997 were progressive with respect to income. Cuts ↑ Incomes → This is how we set the parameter in the Progressive Reductions Factor
The numbers submitted by countries, Jan. 31, 2010,under the Copenhagen Accord,were also progressive Emissions targets for 2020 expressed vs. BAU (WITCH model) Cuts ↓ Income per capita
Emissions path for rich countriesFig. 2b Predicted actual emissions exceed caps, by permit purchases.
Emissions path for poor countriesFig. 4b Predicted actual emissions fall below caps, by permit sales.
Price of Carbon Dioxide Fig. 6b rises slowly over 50 years, then rapidly.