Existing Emissions Laws Could Cut U.S. Footprint Without Climate Bill

A day after the Senate pulled the plug on a comprehensive climate bill, a new report shows the U.S. could reduce greenhouse gas emissions 14 percent below 2005 levels by 2020 by aggressively using existing state and federal policies.

A 14 percent reduction, however, falls short of President Barack Obama’s Copenhagen commitment, as well the emissions reduction targets put forth in the most recent climate legislation that was put forth and failed over the last year. It also pales in comparison to the cuts most scientists say is needed to avoid the worst effects of climate change.

“The study highlights both the need to pass climate legislation and the importance of preserving existing authorities,” Jonathan Lash, president of the World Resources Institute, which wrote the report, said in a statement. “The study’s findings make it very clear that current efforts by Congress to curb U.S. EPA authority will undermine U.S. competitiveness in a clean energy world economy, block control of dangerous pollutants, and put the U.S. at odds with its allies.”

As Lash alluded to, the 14 percent reduction calculated by WRI is far from assured, given recent attacks on the EPA and state laws. Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), for example, tried and failed to rein in the EPA’s authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions, while a push from Big Oil-funded organizations in California put the fate of the state’s aggressive climate change law on the November ballot. At the same time, some have backed off participation in regional emissions trading programs, such as Arizona, which distanced itself from the Western Climate Initiative because of the economic downturn.

The 14 percent reduction would require pushing existing laws and regulations to the fullest extent possible under a set of circumstances the World Resources Institute calls the “go-getter” scenario. The Obama administration and states would have to maintain “steadfast resolve” in order to achieve this upper range of emissions reductions.

The WRI study also evaluated the potential results from three other scenarios: a “lackluster” scenario with efforts in the lower range of what is technically possible; “middle-of-the-road,” based on the medium range of what is technically feasible, with moderate regulatory ambition; and a “business-as-usual” scenario.

It found that “lackluster” state and federal efforts would only push emissions to 6 percent below 2005 levels by 2020, while a “middle-of-the-road” approach would trim emissions 9 percent by 2020.

Keeping concentrations of carbon dioxide emissions below 450 parts per million, considered to be the upper range needed to avoid the worst impacts of climate change (but considered by some to still be too high) would require emissions reductions of 36 percent to 48 percent by 2020.

The most effective tools in the U.S. regulatory arsenal are the Clean Air Act’s mobile source and New Source Performance Standard provisions, its Title VI authority to reduce hydrofluorocarbons, and the Department of Transportation’s vehicle fuel efficiency authority.

Additional state level action would be needed to close the gap, as well as some regulatory policies not included the report, such as transportation planning and forest lands management. Existing tools will also need to be beefed up to meet long-term emissions reduction goals.

Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions in the United States Using Existing Federal Authorities and State Action

This report shows how the U.S. could reduce greenhouse gas emissions 14 percent below 2005 levels by 2020 by aggressively using existing state and federal policies.

A 14 percent reduction falls short of President Barack Obama’s Copenhagen commitment, as well the emissions reduction targets put forth in the most recent climate legislation that was put forth and failed over the last year. It also pales in comparison to the cuts most scientists say is needed to avoid the worst effects of climate change.

“The study highlights both the need to pass climate legislation and the importance of preserving existing authorities,” Jonathan Lash, president of the World Resources Institute, which wrote the report, said in a statement. “The study’s findings make it very clear that current efforts by Congress to curb U.S. EPA authority will undermine U.S. competitiveness in a clean energy world economy, block control of dangerous pollutants, and put the U.S. at odds with its allies.”

The 14 percent reduction would require pushing existing laws and regulations to the fullest extent possible under a set of circumstances the World Resources Institute calls the “go-getter” scenario. The Obama administration and states would have to maintain “steadfast resolve” in order to achieve this upper range of emissions reductions.

The WRI study also evaluated the potential results from three other scenarios: a “lackluster” scenario with efforts in the lower range of what is technically possible; “middle-of-the-road,” based on the medium range of what is technically feasible, with moderate regulatory ambition; and a “business-as-usual” scenario.

KPMG Hits Carbon, Paper Reduction Targets Early

Audit, tax and consultant firm KPMG has exceeded its carbon footprint reduction goal a year ahead of schedule.

The U.S. arm of global consultancy KPMG launched its Living Green program in 2008 with a range of goals centered on cutting carbon, resources and waste.

Originally planning to reduce its carbon footprint by 25 percent by 2010, KPMG lowered it by 26 percent by the end of 2009. Specifically, it cut its footprint by about 7 percent between 2007 and 2008, and by about 20 percent between 2008 and 2009.

The firm is also planning to reduce waste by 10 percent, reduce paper consumption by 15 percent, increase alternative transportation by 5 percent and have all of its new construction achieve LEED certification by 2010.

Since the start of the program, KPMG has lowered its electricity use by 9 percent, cut paper consumption by 33 percent and increased use of recycled paper by 85 percent. It also has five LEED certified offices, in Nashville, Boston, Charlotte, San Diego and Orange County, Calif.

As part of the program, the company set up local Living Green Teams in offices around the U.S. The teams created recycling programs, got involved in local environmental programs and hosted volunteer events around Earth Day.

Nuclear power ‘won’t fuel arms race’

The head of Australia’s nuclear science agency has rejected claims that nuclear power in Australia could lead to nuclear weapons in the region.

Greens Leader Bob Brown has warned that introducing nuclear power would invite the prospect of Australia’s neighbours developing nuclear weapons.

Senator Brown says it is an unnecessary and dangerous option.

“If we go to nuclear power, [we] invite and stimulate, as [Barack] Obama worries about, a nuclear power development amongst our neighbours,” he said.

“And when you go to nuclear power you then have the prospect of nuclear weapons.”

But Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO) chairman Ziggy Switkowski says Senator Brown’s logic does not make sense.

“There is no country that has moved from civilian nuclear power to nuclear weapons,” he told the National Press Club.

“The other way round from the period of the Second World War, yes, there are examples, but none that starts with civilian power. The path to nuclear weapons from there is very, very difficult, so it’s not going to happen.”

Dr Switkowski predicts the majority of Australians will support nuclear power within the next three years as it is crucial to a successful clean energy strategy.

He says public opinion is shifting and he expects whichever party is in government next term to consider nuclear energy.

“There will come a time in the next two or three years when we all realise that the challenge of moving to clean energy and delivering on these very ambitious greenhouse reduction targets is overwhelming, and we don’t have the technologies reliably available to us other than nuclear power,” he said.

Dr Switkowski also defended the safety record of nuclear power, saying it has not been bettered by any other industry.

He says any insurance company would conclude that a nuclear reactor is not a safety risk.

“The 59 reactors in France are found adjacent to villages, in the middle of vineyards, alongside cathedrals,” he said.

“They are actually remarkably safe.

“If you are ever in a stressed social situation – earthquake, typhoon, cyclone – run to the nuclear power station. They are designed better than anything else we have out there.”

Largest firms need to double pace of CO2 reductions to avoid dangerous climate change

Washington, August 25 (ANI): A new research report has determined that the world’s largest companies need to double the pace of carbon dioxide (CO2) reductions to avoid dangerous climate change.

According to ‘The Carbon Chasm’, a research report by the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP), based on current reduction targets, the world’s largest companies are on track to reach the scientifically recommended level of greenhouse gas cuts by 2089 – 39 years too late to avoid dangerous climate change.

It shows that the Global 100 firms (92 of which participated in the study) are currently on track for an annual reduction of just 1.9 percent per annum which is below the 3.9 percent needed in order to cut emissions in developed economies by 80 percent in 2050.

According to the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC), developed economies must reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 80-95 percent by 2050 in order to avoid dangerous climate change.

The research was conducted to analyze how the world’s largest 100 companies currently set greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets and whether they are sufficient to combat long term climate change.

Of those emissions reduction targets with a deadline, a majority (84 percent) are set up to and including 2012, which correlates with the final year of the Kyoto Protocol and suggests that businesses may be waiting to hear outcomes of the UN Conference of the Parties meeting in Copenhagen this December (COP-15) before they set longer term reduction goals.

“Most large companies now measure their carbon footprint and many have set carbon reduction targets. But how many of those targets are actually in line with the required reductions to prevent dangerous climate change?” BT’s Chief Sustainability Officer Chris Tuppen commented.

“The research highlights a significant gap between what is needed from the corporate sector and what’s currently promised. We in the business world need to find a way of closing this carbon chasm,” he said.

According to Paul Dickinson, CEO of the Carbon Disclosure Project, “While 73 percent of Global 100 companies have set some form of reduction target, the majority need to be far more aggressive if they are to achieve the long-term reductions required.”

“This is a time of huge opportunity for businesses to gain competitive advantage by reducing their own impact on the climate and benefit from associated cost savings, as well as sparking major innovation around the production of new, lower carbon products and services,” he said. (ANI)

Can the G8 live up to the climate challenge?

By Ben Nimmo Brussels, July 5 (DPA) A year ago, the leaders of the world’s eight leading industrialised nations promised that their children would fight climate change. This summer, they will have to show whether they are willing to do something about it themselves.

The leaders of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the US are set to meet during July 8-10 in the earthquake-stricken Italian town of L’Aquila, with climate change high on the agenda ahead of UN talks in Copenhagen in December.

The last time when the leaders from the Group of Eight (G8) met in Japan in July 2008, they agreed to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions by 50 percent before 2050.

Environmental groups attacked that pledge, saying that the leaders at the summit would be dead long before the target date, and that the target itself was meaningless, since it did not say what year would be used as the base for calculating the actual size of the cut.

Now the pressure is on for G8 members to set shorter-range targets which they themselves might have to implement.

Italy, which currently holds the G8 presidency, wants the meeting to agree that global emissions should peak by 2020 and that world temperature change should be limited to 2 degrees Centigrade above pre-industrial levels.

Those two targets are based on the research of the UN’s climate change experts, and have already been accepted in the EU.

But they have not yet been endorsed by the G8’s non-European members, with the US and Japan – the world’s two biggest economies – saying that it would be wrong to agree on a mid-term target and overall temperature goal before the Copenhagen talks.

G8 members are also at odds over the question of how each one should define its national emissions reduction targets.

EU members want the G8 to use 1990 as the “base year” for calculating cuts. The EU has already put that policy into practice by pledging to cut emissions to 20 percent below 1990 levels by 2020, and to go to 30 percent if other major economies follow suit.

EU emissions have fallen by some eight percent since 1990, meaning that the bloc will have to manage a further cut of some 12 percent compared with 1990 over the next 12 years.

But the US and Japan, whose emissions have risen by close on 20 percent since 1990, say that they cannot accept 1990 as a base year, because this would leave them having to make much steeper cuts than their European economic rivals.

The duo, who are currently eyeing cuts which would bring them back to or just below 1990 levels by 2020, insist that any G8 deal should be based on the principle of equal effort from now on.

That is unlikely to go down well in the EU and Russia, who want to be given the maximum possible credit for their post-1990 cuts.

Meetings on the fringes of the G8 summit are also set to be fraught, with the Major Economies Forum (MEF) – the G8 plus Australia, Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, South Korea, Mexico and South Africa – also due to debate thorny issues of global warming.

The thorniest is the question of how rich countries should pay poor ones to fight climate change – and who counts as “poor”.

Estimates of the amount needed to support less wealthy states in the climate change fight range from $100 billion to $200 billion a year by 2020. Britain has proposed a $100-billion-a-year fund, to be funded by the sale of emissions permits and by development aid.

On June 19, an EU summit urged leading powers to agree on a formula for splitting the bill, based on their historical emissions and current wealth.

They also said that major developing economies should chip in.

Both calls are likely to provoke fierce debate in L’Aquila – especially since EU members have, as yet, been unable to agree how they themselves should split the EU’s share of the total global bill.

But with the Copenhagen talks just five months away, G8 and MEF leaders are likely to find that the pressure is on them to agree to action for this decade, rather than the next.

Supply chain report reveals need to improve supplier awareness of climate change threats

Washington, March 8 (ANI): The first ever global collaboration on climate change between major organisations and their suppliers has demonstrated the need for increased supplier awareness of the regulatory, physical and general risks that climate change poses to their business.

Of 634 suppliers surveyed globally by the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP), only 58 percent considered that climate change posed a risk to their operations, while one third said it posed no risk, showing there is still a lack of understanding from suppliers of the business threats from climate change.

Cadbury, Colgate-Palmolive, Johnson and Johnson, Juniper Networks, P and G, Unilever and Vodafone are amongst the 34 member companies using the CDP system to request major suppliers report on their carbon footprint and climate change strategies in order to maintain a resilient and sustainable supply chain.

Between 40-60 percent of organisations’ total greenhouse gas emissions are recognised as residing outside their direct control and are found within the supply chain through activities such as processing, packaging and transportation.

It is therefore critical for senior management to understand climate change risks within their supply chain and how suppliers are managing those risks.

This CDP process is the first to bring together the huge purchasing power of global corporations to provide a standard reporting model for suppliers to advance carbon disclosure in the supply chain.

Suppliers were invited to complete an information request examining their carbon risks and opportunities, emissions, reduction targets and plans, governance and product lifecycles. 634 suppliers responded globally, with the proportion of response rates from invited suppliers highest from North America.

Suppliers to the 34 member companies span multiple sectors and countries.

The report indicated that Asian suppliers are using governance and employee incentives to drive positive action in carbon and climate change activity.

Of the 77 responding suppliers based in Asia, 66 percent cite board level responsibility for climate change issues, above the 54 percent average.

In addition, 39 percent of responding Asian companies reported the use of employee incentives, which can be a key lever for change.

According to Frances Way, Head of Supply Chain at CDP, “Procurement teams worldwide must take a role in developing more sustainable business practices and embed the issue of climate change into an organisation’s core operations.”

“Risks posed to a company’s supply chain from the impacts of climate change include extreme weather events, water scarcity, regulation and associated cost volatility. Companies must take steps to mitigate the impact of these risks to their business,” he said. (ANI)