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INTRODUCTION
Chapter 9. Cutting Carbon Emissions in Half
Lester R. Brown, Plan B: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a
Civilization in Trouble (W.W. Norton & Co., NY: 2003).
When the Kyoto Protocol was negotiated in 1997, the proposed 5-percent
reduction in carbon emissions from 1990 levels in industrial countries
by 2012 seemed like an ambitious goal. Now it is seen by more and
more people as being out of date. Even before the treaty has entered
into force, many of the countries committed to carrying it out have
discovered that they can do even better.1
National governments, local governments, corporations, and environmental
groups are coming up with ambitious plans to cut carbon emissions.
Prominent among these is a plan developed by the British government
to reduce carbon emissions 60 percent by 2050, the amount that scientists
deem necessary to stabilize atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) levels.
Building on this, Prime Minister Tony Blair and Sweden's Prime Minister
Göran Persson are jointly urging the European Union to adopt the
60-percent goal.2
A plan developed for Canada by the David Suzuki Foundation and the
Climate Action Network would halve carbon emissions by 2030 and
would do it only with investments in energy efficiency that are
profitable. And in early April 2003, the World Wildlife Fund released
a peer-reviewed analysis by a team of scientists that proposed reducing
carbon emissions from U.S. electric power generation 60 percent
by 2020. This proposal centers on a shift to more energy-efficient
power generation equipment, the use of more-efficient household
appliances and industrial motors and other equipment, and in some
situations a shift from coal to natural gas. If implemented, it
would result in national savings averaging $20 billion a year from
now until 2020.3
In Canada's most populous province, an environmental groupthe
Ontario Clear Air Alliancehas
devised a plan to phase out the province's five coal-fired power
plants, the first one in 2005 and the last one by 2015. The plan
is supported by all three major political parties. Jack Gibbons,
director of the Alliance, says of coal burning, "It's a nineteenth
century fuel that has no place in twenty-first century Ontario."4
Germany, which has set the pace for reducing carbon emissions among
industrial countries, is now talking about lowering its emissions
by 40 percent by 2020. And this is a country that is already far
more energy-efficient than the United States. Contrasting goals
for cutting carbon emissions in Germany and the United States are
due to a lack of leadership in the latternot
a lack of technology.5
U.S.-based Interface, the world's largest manufacturer of industrial
carpeting, cut carbon emissions in its Canadian affiliate during
the 1990s by two thirds from the peak. It did so by examining every
facet of its businessfrom
electricity consumption to trucking procedures. The company has
saved more than $400,000 a year in energy expenditures. CEO Ray
Anderson says, "Interface Canada has reduced greenhouse gas emissions
by 64 percent from the peak, and made money in the process, in no
small measure because our customers support environmental responsibility."
The Canadian plan to cut carbon emissions in half by 2030 was inspired
by the profitability of the Interface initiative.6
Although stabilizing atmospheric CO2 levels is a staggering challenge,
it is entirely doable. Detailed studies by governments and by various
environmental groups are beginning to reveal the potential for reducing
carbon emissions while saving money in the process. With advances
in wind turbine design and the evolution of the fuel cell, we now
have the basic technologies needed to shift quickly from a carbon-based
to a hydrogen-based energy economy. Cutting world carbon emissions
in half by 2015 is entirely within range. Ambitious though this
might seem, it is commensurate with the threat that climate change
poses.
ENDNOTES
1. United Nations, Kyoto Protocol to the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change (New York: 1997).
2. United Kingdom from Secretary of State for Trade and Industry,
Our Energy Future-Creating a Low Carbon Economy (Norwich: The Stationery
Office, February 2003); goal for the European Union from Tony Blair
and Göran Persson, letter to the European Council, London and Stockholm,
25 February 2003, at statsradsberedningen.regeringen.se/Pdf/gpblair_
feb03.pdf.
3. Ralph Torrie, Richard Parfett, and Paul Steenhof, Kyoto and Beyond:
The Low-Emission Path to Innovation and Efficiency (Ottawa: The
David Suzuki Foundation and Climate Action Network Canada, October
2002); Alison Bailie et al., The Path to Carbon-Dioxide-Free Power:
Switching to Clean Energy in the Utility Sector, A Study for the
World Wildlife Fund (Washington, DC: Tellus Institute and The Center
for Energy and Climate Solutions, April 2003).
4. Gibbons quoted in Martin Mittelstaedt, "Putting Out the Fires,"
(Toronto) Globe and Mail, 15 March 2003.
5. Germany's goals cited in Corin Millais, "European Wind Energy
Achieves 40% Growth Rate," press release (Brussels: European Wind
Energy Association (EWEA), 13 November 2002).
6. Ray Anderson, writing in Torrie, Parfett, and Steenhof, op. cit.
note 3, p. 2.
Copyright
© 2003 Earth Policy Institute
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