Source: The Guardian
Every week, governmentsā headline announcements save the planet, and every week their smallprint unsaves it. The latest puff by the G7 is a classic of the genre. Apparently, all seven governments have committed āto conserve or protect at least 30 per cent of the worldās land and at least 30 per cent of the worldās ocean by 2030ā. But what does it mean? The UK, which says it secured the new agreement, claims already to have āconserved or protectedā 26% of its land and 38% of its seas. In reality, it has simply drawn lines on the map, designating our sheepwrecked hills and trawler-trashed seas āprotectedā, when theyāre nothing of the kind. This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a press release.
All governments do this, but Boris Johnsonās has perfected the art. It operates on the principle of commitment inflation: as the action winds down, the pledges ramp up. Never mind that it wonāt meet the targets set by the fourth and fifth carbon budgets: it now has a thrilling new target for the sixth one. Never mind that it canāt meet its old commitment, of an 80% cut in greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. Instead, it has promised us ānet zeroā by the same date. Yes, we need more ambition, yes, it is following official advice, but higher targets appear to be a substitute for action.
Fifteen years ago, I wrote a book called Heat. I tried to work out how far we would have to cut greenhouse gases to fulfil our international obligations fairly, and how we could do it without destroying the prosperity and peace on which success depends. The best estimates at the time suggested that if the UK were justly to discharge its responsibility for preventing climate breakdown, we would need to cut our emissions by 90% by 2030.
Researching the preface for a new edition, I wanted to discover how much progress weāve made. An article in the journal Climate Policy uses a similar formula for global fairness. Its conclusion? If the UK were justly to discharge its responsibility for preventing climate breakdown ā¦. we would need to cut our emissions by 90% by 2030. And by 2035, it says, our emissions should reach āreal zeroā. In other words, in terms of the metric that really counts, we have gone nowhere. The difference is that we now have nine years in which to make the 90% cut, instead of 24.
How could this be true, given that the UK has reduced its greenhouse gas emissions by 49% since 1990? Surely weāve been a global leader on climate action?
Itās partly because we now know that limiting global heating to 2°C commits us to a dangerous world. In theory, governments have accepted a more stringent target of 1.5°C. But itās also because, if we ignore the impact of the pandemic, our reduction of greenhouse gases has stalled.
We did the easy things first. Coal-burning power stations were replaced with gas, and some of the gas with renewables. This makes no difference to most people: when we flick the switch, the lights still come on. But almost all the other reductions must involve us directly. They wonāt happen unless the government mobilises the nation: encouraging us to drive less and use our feet, bicycles and public transport more; taxing frequent flyers; refitting our homes; reducing the meat we eat; reducing the emissions embedded in the stuff we buy. On these issues, the governmentās commitment to action amounts to zero. Not net zero. Absolute zero.
Surface transport in the UK releases the same amount of greenhouse gases as it did in 1990: a shocking failure by successive governments. Yet Johnson intends to spend another £27 billion on roads. Every major airport in the UK has plans to expand.
Buildings release more greenhouse gases than they did in 2014, and the schemes intended to green them have collapsed. The green homes grant, which the government outsourced to a private company, has been a total fiasco, meeting roughly 8% of its target. At the current rate of installation, the UKās homes will be equipped with low-carbon heating in a mere 700 years.
When I wrote Heat, we were promised that all new homes would soon be green ones. It still hasnāt happened, and date has been pushed forward yet again, to 2025. Rubbish homes are still being built, which will either require a much more expensive refit or will lock in high emissions for the rest of their lives.
And no one in government wants to touch the biggest issue of all: the greenhouse gases embedded in the stuff we buy, that account for some 46% of our emissions. Government ministers urge China to cut its greenhouse gases, but our economic model depends on us buying junk we donāt need with money we donāt have. Because the fossil fuels required to produce most of it are burnt overseas and donāt appear in our national accounts, the government can wash its hands of the problem.
But something has changed for the better: us. In 2006, climate campaigners beat their heads against public indifference. Now, at last, we have mass movements, and some highly effective actions, like the successful shutdown of the McDonalds network by Animal Rebellion last week. If there is hope, this is where it lies.
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