podesta-emails
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Fyi
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Pete Ogden" <[email protected]>
Date: Aug 14, 2014 3:32 PM
Subject: Foreign Affairs: Beyond Copenhagen
To: "John Podesta" <[email protected]>
Cc:
Hi John -- I wanted to pass along this Foreign Affairs article on the
climate talks that I had to go ahead and write without you here. Hope all
is good. --Pete
http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/141692/pete-ogden/beyond-copenhagen
Foreign Affairs Beyond Copenhagen How Washington Can Bolster a Stronger
Climate Deal
By Pete Ogden <http://www.foreignaffairs.com/author/pete-ogden>
August 4, 2014
Steam rising from a coal-fired power plant in Wyoming, March 2014. (Jim
Urquhart / Courtesy Reuters)
On June 2, U.S. President Barack Obama proposed the country’s first-ever
federal regulation on greenhouse gas pollution resulting from existing
power plants. The rule, intended to cut carbon emissions from the power
sector to 30 percent below 2005 levels by 2030, is an indispensable piece
of the administration’s climate policy, which it has painstakingly
assembled since a comprehensive energy and climate bill collapsed in the
Senate in mid-2010.
Predictably, Obama’s proposal set off a firestorm of political hyperbole.
The Senate’s top Republican, Mitch McConnell, decried it as a “dagger in
the heart of the middle class,” and John Boehner, speaker of the House,
called it “a sucker punch for families everywhere.” In fact, there is much
about the rule to celebrate, including the notion that for the first time
it puts the United States on track to meet its international commitment,
made in 2009 as part of the Copenhagen Accord, to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions to 17 percent below 2005 levels by 2020.
The Copenhagen climate conference, often remembered more for heated
arguments and a chaotic conclusion than for what it achieved, was actually
a turning point in international climate talks. For the first time, all
major polluting states -- developed and developing -- agreed to stem their
emissions. This was no small victory, and it is far from secure, as China,
India, and other major emerging economies remain keen to restore and
maximize the differences between their responsibilities and those of
developed countries in the climate negotiations.
Fortunately, thanks to the newly proposed pollution rule and other polices,
the United States is finally on a path to meeting its own Copenhagen
emission reduction commitments. Its increased global credibility comes at
the perfect time: At the end of next year, global leaders will convene in
Paris to conclude the next major round of climate negotiations, where the
United States can use its newfound clout to secure the gains of the
Copenhagen agreement and reach a stronger, more durable deal.
A DEEP FREEZE
More than one hundred world leaders and tens of thousands of government
officials, environmental activists, and journalists attended the 2009
Copenhagen conference, where they hoped to reach a new international
agreement to combat climate change. But when Obama arrived in Copenhagen
for the final day of the conference, negotiations were in what U.S.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton would later call a “deep freeze.” It
fell to individual leaders to negotiate a deal or be party to a spectacular
global failure. And it was not until the final evening, when Obama and
Clinton interrupted a strategy session between Wen Jiabao, who was Chinese
premier at the time, and the leaders of Brazil, India, and South Africa,
that the final breakthrough occurred.
The resulting Copenhagen Accord -- which took the form of a pledge rather
than a new set of internationally legally binding commitments -- was a
major disappointment to those who had hoped for a new treaty or protocol.
But it was only by departing from a new treaty arrangement that China,
India, and all of the world’s major economies could agree, for the first
time, to reduce their greenhouse gas pollution.
That accomplishment should not be diminished. It marked a major step
forward from previous rounds of negotiations. The 1997 Kyoto Protocol, for
example, had divided the world into developed and developing countries --
according to classifications in the 1992 UN Framework Convention on Climate
Change -- with only the former required to reduce emissions. Of course,
such a permanent division is untenable for any twenty-first-century
agreement aimed at curbing climate change, as countries that were
classified as “developing” in the early 1990s are projected to account for
roughly 95 percent of the growth in future emissions -- with China alone
expected to make up half that figure. China’s emissions have tripled since
1990; by 2020, it could well emit twice as much as the United States. In
Copenhagen, it wasn’t easy to get large developing countries on board, but
in the end, they agreed, like their counterparts from developed countries,
to cut emissions by a self-determined amount by 2020.
Having secured the deal, it was time for the United States to formally put
forth its own target, which required a balancing act. On the one hand, an
unrealistically high target would undercut the credibility of the entire
accord. On the other, a cautiously low target would undermine the very
purpose of reaching an agreement: to substantively alter each country’s
emissions trajectory. The Obama administration hoped to thread the needle
by selecting as its target the reduction set forth by the energy and
climate legislation that was still winding its way through Congress.
When that legislation floundered the following year, however, the United
States was left without a clear path toward fulfilling its international
pledge. There was still hope, of course: Obama secured major new vehicle
efficiency standards and took other steps that limited greenhouse gas
emissions, while the natural gas boom displaced emissions from some
higher-polluting coal plants. But it wasn’t until 2013’s Climate Action
Plan that Obama articulated a clear strategy for reaching the Copenhagen
goal. Moreover, it wasn’t until last June, with the announcement of the new
regulations on power plants that this critical element of the plan came
into focus.
It took a few years, but never before has U.S. domestic and international
climate policy been so well aligned. And that too just in time for the
final sprint to the Paris climate conference, where countries will seek to
finalize a new climate deal to succeed the Copenhagen Accord after 2020.
Although a wide range of agreements may seem possible, the space for a
viable deal remains quite limited, and failure is always a possibility.
Still, the U.S. administration can maximize its chances of success by
executing a strategy focused on securing the gains of the Copenhagen Accord
and galvanizing new global action to meet the climate challenge.
THE PARIS PROJECT
First, the Obama administration must insist that all major economies commit
to new emissions targets for the post-2020 period. The new deal should be
modeled on the Copenhagen Accord, with countries held equally accountable
to their targets and with an intensive international review process to
encourage compliance. But this is easier said than done, as major
developing countries will undoubtedly push for as much of a Kyoto-style
firewall as possible between their obligations and those of developed
countries.
Meanwhile, the United States must be clear with other countries about its
own ability to comply with a new agreement. If the Paris deal takes the
form of a legally binding treaty or protocol, for example, Senate
ratification would be required for the United States to formally join. The
prospects of such a ratification in the immediate future are dim, and the
Obama administration should thus only support an agreement that it believes
either doesn’t require ratification – as was the case with the Copenhagen
Accord – or in which it could meaningfully participate while ratification
is pending. Transparency here is key: The United States should not appear
to be negotiating in bad faith even if other countries ultimately choose a
deal that precludes U.S. participation.
Of course, as in Copenhagen, the dynamic between the United States and
China will be critical in shaping any outcome. This time, though, there is
some cause for optimism. When President Obama and Chinese President Xi
Jinping met in 2013 at the Sunnylands estate in California for their first
presidential summit, they agreed to support the use of the 1987 Montreal
Protocol to limit the production and consumption of hydrofluorocarbons, a
particularly potent greenhouse gas used in air-conditioning units and
refrigerators. The agreement signaled that China was open to making climate
change a positive and central feature of its bilateral relationship with
the United States, something the Obama administration had pursued with
intermittent success since 2009. The agreement was also important because
it utilized the Montreal Protocol -- an international treaty designed to
phase out substances responsible for ozone depletion – which has been
successful in large part because it does not create the same distinction
between developed and developing countries that haunts the international
climate negotiations. This may presage a willingness by China to be
similarly pragmatic in Paris.
STRONGER TOGETHER
The form the final Paris agreement takes will be of little relevance,
however, if it does not include a plan to meaningfully alter the global
emissions trajectory. The Copenhagen agreement left it up to each country
to define what that would mean in practice, and since it remains infeasible
to win consensus on a broad formula to allocate responsibility among
countries, the Paris agreement will likely also be comprised of commitments
determined nationally. This means that the United States needs to lock down
its own target while also pushing countries to set ambitious goals for
themselves.
The United States, in setting its target, faces a different challenge now
than it did in the run up to Copenhagen. The 2009 energy and climate bill
would have put U.S. emissions at roughly 42 percent below 2005 levels by
2030, but that legislation currently has no chance of revival. Obama’s new
Climate Action Plan, meanwhile, enumerates only the policies necessary to
reach the country’s target for 2020, not a longer-term goal. In the next
few months, then, the United States must be willing to set an ambitious yet
credible new target for 2025 or 2030 that commits to additional action
beyond Obama’s time in office.
Setting a strong target is only part of the challenge that the Obama
administration faces. While the United States is the world’s second-largest
carbon polluter, it accounts for only about 15 percent of global emissions
-- and its share is shrinking. A strong agreement, therefore, also requires
aggressive action by the other major emitters. The United States, of
course, can only influence other nations up to a point, but all goals will
inevitably be measured against that of the U.S. target – the implicit
benchmark. By sharing a strong target, the United States will affirm the
credibility of its commitment to slashing emissions and encourage others to
follow suit.
Strong country-by-country pledges will remain the backbone of the
agreement, but the United States should also work with other major
economies to identify collective milestones such as the current goal to
limit global warming to less than two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial
levels. In the past, collective targets have been hampered by the familiar
conflict between developed and developing countries. But if all nations are
putting new commitments on the table, the timing may be right to build a
new layer of international commitments on top. Countries could jointly set
a date by which global emissions should peak and begin declining, for
example. Or they might set a date by which they must double the use of
renewable energy, or a clear timeframe for cutting global fossil fuel
subsidies in half. Putting deadlines to these challenges brings them
sharply into focus and helps to force countries to confront them while
there is still time.
MONEY ON THE TABLE
In addition to helping set the goals, the United States has another job to
do: It must help provide monetary assistance to developing countries that
are trying to reduce emissions while responding to the adverse effects of
climate change. Financial support, while justifiable in and of itself, will
also go a long way toward building support for a broader agreement. Given
that the climate conference has operated by consensus -- meaning that any
of the nearly 200 countries could try to block an outcome -- a financial
incentive would place significant pressure on China, India, Brazil, and
other major emitters to reach an agreement. Failure to do so, after all,
could cost poorer countries billions of dollars.
This dynamic was on display in Copenhagen. With negotiations stalled on the
penultimate day of the conference, Clinton announced that richer countries
would agree to mobilize an annual $100 billion of climate finance, from a
mix of public and private sources, by 2020. The money, Clinton said, would
be provided “in the context of a strong accord in which all major economies
stand behind meaningful mitigation actions and provide full transparency as
to their implementation.” With money on the table for poorer countries,
China, India, and the other major economies had a new incentive to reach an
agreement.
Meeting that $100 billion goal, however, has been a challenge -- one that
became even harder with the collapse of the U.S. energy and climate bill,
which could have generated large amounts of climate assistance. The bill
would have allowed U.S. companies to meet a portion of their greenhouse gas
reduction obligations by investing in lower-cost reduction opportunities in
developing countries, which alone could have generated more than $10
billion annually in green investments.
Despite the absence of such legislation, the Obama administration still
managed to quadruple U.S. public climate assistance to $2.7 billion in
2013. But there is only so much more public money that Congress will
appropriate for this purpose, and other donor countries are similarly
constrained.
In this environment of fiscal austerity, donor countries should thus focus
public money on helping vulnerable countries cope with the effects of
climate change, while encouraging private sources to finance clean energy
and energy efficiency. One notable success in the latter category has been
the U.S. Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC), which has
supported U.S. private investment in renewable energy projects in
developing countries. OPIC increased its support for clean energy from $8.9
million in 2008 to a record-breaking $1.2 billion in 2013. Government
agencies are now working to find and cultivate new opportunities for U.S.
clean energy investment around the globe.
Meanwhile, instead of simply making new, larger financial pledges, donor
countries should instead direct resources toward addressing key climate
needs. For one, donor countries should find creative strategies to help
developing countries reduce fossil fuel subsidies, which amount to more
than $500 billion a year and drain resources that could be put to better
use. One idea might be for donor countries to work with the World Bank to
issue bonds to developing countries willing to repay them through money
saved from eliminating subsidies. To help developing countries cope with an
increase in extreme weather and natural disasters fueled by climate change,
richer countries could also expand tools such as the Caribbean Catastrophe
Risk Insurance Facility, which pools risk and provides rapid payout in the
event of a tragedy.
Of course, the United States cannot simply impose its will in the famously
fraught arena of international climate negotiations. Copenhagen showed how
difficult climate talks can be. Still, it also demonstrated how much effort
the United States and others are willing to invest in an agreement. Six
years later, with climate change on the rise, the stakes have only
intensified.
Just before leaving Copenhagen, Obama said to the press, “I believe what we
have achieved in Copenhagen will not be the end but rather the beginning --
the beginning of a new era of international action.” A successful outcome
in Paris next year could help to prove him right.
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
5703681471c9230f3aa88fa1f1238c37d49d2a6c99e9f82ee847fda13347477f
Dataset
podesta-emails
Document Type
email
Comments 0