Conference on Policies and Measures
of Climate Change Mitigation
Issue and IPCC
The consumption
of expendable resources continues to rise as the developed countries
pursue wealth while rapid economic growth and population increase
continue in developing countries. Especially, there is a concern that
the increase In fossil fuel consumption will raise the atmospheric
concentration of CO2, and thus cause climate change due to the global
warming effect.
In December of this
year, the 3rd Conference of Parties (COP3) for UN Framework Convention
on Climate Change (UNFCCC) will be he]d In Kyoto, Japan. As a precedent
for COP3, Global Industrial and Social Progress Research Institute
(GISPRI) held the captioned conference with thc Ministry of International
Trade and Industry (MITI) and the New Energy and Industrial Technology
Development Organization (NEDO). The invitee for this conference included
the policy-makers and relevant parties concerned in the policies and
measures of greenhouse gas emission reduction.
The keynote address
was delivered by Dr. R. Watson, a Chair-Elect of Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) on the subject of "Technical Paper-Technology,
Policies, and Measures, and the prospect of IPCC activities."
Schedule :
28 Jan. 1997, Tue., 11 :O00- 17:00
29 Jan. 1997, Wed., 10:00 - 17:10
Place:
Keio Plaza Hotel, Tokyo, Japan
Host organizations:
Ministry of International Trade and Industry
The New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization
Global Industrial and Social Progress Research Institute
Participating countries:
Australia, China, France, Germany, Indonesia, Thailand, UK, USA, and
Japan
Program:
January 28th, Tuesday
Keynote address:
"Technical Paper-Technology, Policies. and Measures. and the prospect
of IPCC activities" (Dr. Robert Watson, IPCC Chair-elect)
Session-1 : "Technology Transfer"
"Current status of and the requests and expectation for, Technology
Transfer concerning greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reduction"
presentations, and comments from participating countries and discussion
January 29th Wednesday
Session-2A: "Tradable Permits/Quotas"
"Emission trading proposed by USA"
"Concept and mechanism of Tradable Permits/Quotas"
Session-2B :"Tradable Permits/Quotas"
Comments and discussion by participating countries
Session-3: "National Policies and Measures"
Comments by participating countries
Language: English and Japanese (simultaneous interpretaion available)
Keynote address
"Technical Paper-Technology, Policies,
and Measures, and the prospect of IPCC activities"
(by Dr. Robert Watson, Chalr-Elect,
IPCC)
1 . Principal activities and purposes of IPCC
First, I would like
to report on the key results of IPCC's study on Technologies, Policies
and Measures, then present my thoughts of how to proceed in IPCC.
The objective of the
Convention is to stabilize the atmospheric concentration of greenhouse
gas at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic perturbation
with the climate system. Furthermore, we need to allow ecosystems to
adapt naturally, not to threaten food production, and to proceed with
economic development in a sustainable manner. For this, some in IPCC
believe that we scientists should define what is the right stabilization
level of GHG concentration in atmosphere.
It is recognized that
the lack of scientific knowledge should not be used as a reason for
postponing measures. There are still key uncertainties in the understanding
of climate change, but we should not use It as an excuse for Inaction.
The Convention also recognizes the need to derive global benefit at
the lowest costs. The topic of emissions trading is one of key points
to be dis-cussed here.
There is no doubt
that the human activlties are Increasing the atmospheric concentration
of GHGs, particularly CO2, methane, and nitrous oxide. CO2, especially,
is the single most important anthropogenic green~house gas, emitted
by the combustion of fossil fuels, coal, oil and natural gas, and from
deforestation. Beside CO2, however, the combustion of fossil fuels emits
sulfur dioxide that tends to cool the atmosphere and offset the green-house
effect. It is important over the areas of the largest combustion of
fossil fuels, such as Europe, North America, and Asia Nonetheless, the
earth's mean surface temperature has definitely warmed in the last one
hundred years, making this century the warmest century since 1400. There
is no question that the earth is warming.
The sea level is also
rising and glaciers are retreating globally. In other words, the earth's
climate system is changing. The question is, is this due to natural
phenomena or due to human actlvities? Comparing the observational record
with our theoretical calculations, the conclusion Is that the climate
change cannot be explained by natural phenomena. Not only the mean surface
temperature of the globe, but the latitudinal and longitudinal changes
in temperatures are consistent with what predicted from the theory when
simultaneous increases in greenhouse gases and sulfate aerosols are
allowed. Therefore, the key conclusion of IPCC was that the discernible
human influence is evident on earth' s environment.
Next, a crucial point
is that, without global policies to mitigate greenhouse gases, the earth's
temperature will increase in the next century prlmarlly due to population
Increases, increases in economic wealth, changes In technology, and
changes in energy prices.
The plausible carbon
dioxide emission level In the year 2100 could be in the range of 6 billlon
tons/year to 36 billion tons/year, depending on the assumptions of populations,
GNP and other factors. The mean surface temperature of the earth could
have increased by 6.5 degrees Fahrenheit wlthin the next lOO years.
This change Is faster than anything we have seen in the last ten thousand
years.
Global warming is
occurring, and to reverse it will take hundreds of years, because of
the atmospheric residence time of carbon dioxide. In fact, once sea
level rise occurs, it is many hundreds of years before you can slow
It down. The good news is that there is a large range of cost-effective
technologies and policies, that can be used in both developed and developing
countries and markedly reduce their emission of greenhouse gases. What
we must look at is both international and inter-generational equity
issues. In this sense, there is justification for going beyond the no-regret
strategy. Concerning the dependence on fossil fuels, it will also have
significant Impact for local alr quality and regional quality.
What are the major
challenges to the Convention? First of all, we have to find the right
choice for the stabilization level. This is a political choice, not
a scientific one. To get to a stabilization level, while effectively
protecting the environment but minimizing the costs, the right choice
of technologies and policies will be regionally specific. The best technologies
and policles in one part of the world are not necessarily being so in
another.
To explain the climate
change issue, the environmental people believe that 450 parts per million
should be the stabilization level of CO2. Others may agree that climate
change is very serious, but believe the stabilization should be somewhere
between 450 and 650 ppm. Then, others who don't believe this issue at
all believe the level could be way up. When I showed this figure to
some environmentalists, they were surprised and said "450 to 650
is outrageous." Clearly different groups have different views as
to the stabilization level.
Concerning the mitigation
measures, IPCC finds that, while we may need to remove subsidies, short
term subsidies may be placed as an incentive to encourage the diffusion
of new energy-efficient technologies into the marketplace during the
build-up phase. The issue of education and training is quite crucial,
too. One of the questions we have to ask is, if we believe climate change
is a serious environmental issue, and we want to move in the direction
of less dependence on fossil fuels - Iet's even argue by the middle
to the end of next century completely fossil free - , then the question
is, are the research development, and demonstration (RD&D) programs
can bring those technologies to market? The investment in RD&D,
in both the private sector and the public sector, is decreasing significantly,
and hence we are going in the wrong direction.
2. Will it be possible
to decrease CO2 ?
The overall conclusion
of the IPCC is that significant reductions are possible. It can be done
without the premature retirement of capital stock, so far as some policy
measures are taken in the next hundred years. When we think about Investments
in energy supply or energy demand, we should take climate change into
account. It needs both technology and policy measures.
After the Second Assessment
Report (SAR), the IPCC was asked by the government to come up with a
new Technical Paper to make the SAR more user-friendly. The focus was
still on the Annex I countries of UNFCCC, while noting the Iniformation
that could be used by non-Annex I countries. The Technical Paper is
based on the SAR and all previous assessments, and differentiated technologies
and measures that can be used in a short term. The short term is defined
as between now and the year 2010, medium-term up to 2020, and the longer
term to 2050, and beyond, which Is more like guessing than working on
the real substance.
The Technical Paper
was consisted of the sections for energy demand, energy supply, agriculture,
forestry, solid waste disposal and waste water treatment, and economic
instruments or cross-sectoral instruments.
First we examined
the market-based programs, such as carbon or energy taxes, internalization
of externalities, phase-out subsidies, and tradable emission permits
and quotas. Also examined were voluntary agreements, regulatory measures,
the importance of RD&D, and the importance of information.
Unlike the SAR, we
tried to do better this time in defining the technical potential, the
economic potential and the market potential. The technical potential
is simply the potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, or improve
energy efficiency, without the consideration on costs and practical
feasibility. The economic potential is the portion of technical potential
effectively realizable in a cost-effective manner when no market barriers
are present. What is cost-effective? In the Technical Paper, we defined
that the technology was cost-effective if the rate of return was within
five years. People could argue that It should be ten years, but we just
tried to define In most places it would be five years. Lastly, the market
potential is what portion of the economic potential that could be realized
with current policies and market conditions, recognizing the existence
of many market barriers .
Table. 1: Total
reported IEA government R & D budgets (columns 1-7 ; US$ billion
at 1994 prices and exchange rates) and GDP (column 8 ; USS trillion
at 1993 prices).
Year
|
(1) Fossil Energy
|
(2) Nuclear Fusion
|
(3) Nuclear Fusion
|
(4) Energy Conservation
|
(5) Renewable Energy
|
(6) Other
|
(7) Total
|
(8) GDP
|
(9) % of GDP
|
1987
|
1.37
|
4.36
|
1.23
|
0.65
|
0.62
|
1.04
|
9.27
|
12.29
|
0.08
|
1988
|
1.46
|
3.64
|
1.13
|
0.53
|
0.62
|
1.19
|
8.58
|
12.82
|
0.07
|
1989
|
1.30
|
4.42
|
1.07
|
0.45
|
0.57
|
1.33
|
9.13
|
13.23
|
0.07
|
1990
|
1.75
|
4.48
|
1.09
|
0.55
|
0.61
|
1.15
|
9.62
|
13.52
|
0.07
|
1991
|
1.52
|
4.45
|
0.99
|
0.59
|
0.64
|
1.39
|
9.57
|
13.58
|
0.07
|
1992
|
1.07
|
3.90
|
0.99
|
0.56
|
0.70
|
1.28
|
8.48
|
13.82
|
0.06
|
1993
|
1.07
|
3.81
|
1.05
|
0.65
|
0.71
|
1.38
|
8.66
|
|
|
1994
|
0.98
|
3.74
|
1.05
|
0.94
|
0.70
|
1.30
|
8.72
|
|
|
When looking at the
rate of Investment in RD&D from 1983 to 1994, over 12 billion dollars
spent in 1983 was dropped significantly in 1994. To me, even worse though
is the percentage of the investment in renewable energies or In energy
conservation, though the investment for the research into nuclear fission
or fusion did not change much. If we really believe we need to move
away from fossil fuels to renewable energies, we must activate more
Investment in this fleld.
So the overall challenge
is how we can capture all of the win-win solutions. If we can make the
system more economically efficient, we can capture energy efficiency,
potentially reducing the CO2 emission by 20%, at little or no cost to
the consumer. We believe there is a wide range of low-cost solutions
such as clean coal technologies, and renewable energies. By not only
focusing on the straight economic efficiency, but also internallzing
local and regional environmental externalities, we can expand economlc
win-win situation.
Another challenge
is how do we bring the price down. The point I want to make here is
that the significant investment in RD&D will be the only way. With
this, we can start to bring the price down. So, the challenge to us
at the moment is to capture as many of the win-win and low-cost solutions
as possible, while investing in RD&D to bring the overall cost down.
3. Future of IPCC
Now, where do we go
from here with respect to IPCC? The SAR was approved in December of
1995. Included were the Synthesis Report and three Working Group Reports.
The Synthesis Report is really not a synthesis, but a cut and paste
of few sentences and paragraphs in various Working Group Reports, that
were considered relevant to interpret in Article 2 of the Convention.
Working Group 2 was
a science assessment as the Working Group I. and it looked at the impact
of climate change on human health, and ecological systems, and the potential
to adapt, though I believe the adaptation study was covered only weakly.
We also looked at the mitigation measures at the Working Group 2.
Working Group 3 tended
to look at the macro economic perspective and some social dimensions
of climate change.
I would like to talk
about some of the limitations that I saw In the SAR. The main limitation
of the SAR was an artificial separation of the social and economic sciences
from the natural and technological sciences. That is to say, the social
economic sciences were primarily in Working Group 3. Also there was
an artificial separatlon of the ecological sciences which was in Working
Group 1 , away from the impact's work. Most of the work in Working Group
2 was done at the sectoral level and did not look very much at cross-sectoral
issues. For example, when looking at the effect of climate change on
water, agriculture, and biomass, we never simultaneously looked at them
from cross-sectoral viewpoints. So, we need to look at far more cross-sectoral
issues by integrating assessments. The integrated assessment models
will start to become quite valuable.
Also, we took rather
global perspective than regional perspective. So we would like to introduce
more of regional perspective in the Third Assessment Report, i.e., regions
such as Africa, Asia, North America, Latin America, etc. We need to
integrate , energy supply and energy demand, and to provide a regional
perspective of the applicability of those technologies and measures.
There were a number of overlap areas between the various Working Groups,
on issues such as oceans, sea level rise, cryosphere, forestry, etc.
Especially the economic issues were over-lapped between Working Group
2 and Working Group 3. These need to be considered while planning the
structure of working groups for the Third Assessment Report (TAR).
When to have the TAR
will depend on many factors incuding the outcome of the Kyoto Conference.
My suggestion at the moment is that the Working Group Reports would
be finished and approved In the year 2000. And the Synthesis Report
built upon the Working Group Reports would be adopted In the year 2001
.
In summary, there is a wide range of cost-effective technologies and
policies that would reduce greenhouse gas emissions, that can be applied
to both in developed and developing countries. What the IPCC identifies
are approaches that make good economic sense independent of climate
change, and that can lead to multiple benefits for local pollution.
What we need now is to design a new IPCC,that is transparent and fair.
In this way, we can strive for the formulation of the TAR, and thereby
actually serving the needs of the policy community.
Thank you.
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