G20 heads in the wrong direction on climate action

Researchers find plenty of room for improvement in current strategies for tackling climate change, a year ahead of a deadline to ramp up their ambition.

Liaoning Province China Coal Plant
Coal-fired electricity plant in Liaoning Province, China. Image: billperry, CC BY-SA 2.0

Emissions from energy, industry, transport, buildings and agriculture in G20 nations all rose in 2018, despite the fact that most have both the technical expertise and economic incentives to lower them, a major report has concluded.

In order to keep global temperature rise to within 1.5°C – the limit recommended by climate scientists on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) – G20 countries need to cut their current greenhouse gas emissions by at least 45 per cent by 2030, compared with 2010 levels, and reach net zero emissions by 2070.

But although there are positive signs in some sectors in some countries, the overall picture painted by the researchers is alarming. If current emission levels persist, the report states, the remaining carbon budget of 420 gigatonnes of CO2 will be expended in just over nine years.

The G20 are responsible for around 80 per cent of global emissions and the Green to Brown report is the most comprehensive annual review of their transition to net zero emissions economies. It is published by the Climate Transparency partnership, a coalition of research organisations and non-governmental organisations from the majority of the G20 countries.

Overall CO2 emissions have gone up in all sectors, but we’re seeing some frontrunners emerging that others can learn from, like China’s policies for promoting electric vehicles and public transport.

Lena Donat, lead author, Brown to Green Report 2019

Drawing on data from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the World Bank and the International Energy Agency, the researchers assess climate action across mitigation, finance and adaptation against benchmarks for keeping global temperature rise within 1.5°C.

In the industrial sector, this equates to reducing CO2 emissions globally by 65-90 per cent from 2010 levels by 2050. But emissions in this sector are the highest in the G20, accounting for 24 per cent of direct energy-related emissions and 17 per cent of indirect emissions from electricity and co-generated heat in 2018.  

Emissions intensity in Indian and Chinese industry is among the highest, partly due to a shift in heavy industry from developed countries towards those that are emerging, the researchers noted. However, they highlighted that both countries have some of the most progressive energy efficiency policies, with measures covering 26-50 per cent of industrial energy use in 2017 in the case of India, and 51-100 per cent in China. But policies on energy efficiency are not enough, and globally the sector needs to accelerate material-use efficiency and demand reduction, they said.

Transport emissions saw a hike of 1.2 per cent in 2018. Low-carbon fuels accounted for less than 6 per cent of the fuel mix – this needs to boosted ten-fold by 2050 to keep global warming below 1.5°C, the report states. Policies need to be more ambitious, with new fossil fuel cars banned by 2035 at the latest, and emissions from freight cut to net-zero by 2050.

Although no G20 country has yet embarked on a comprehensive transition in the transport sector that is 1.5°C compatible, China’s leadership in many areas was stressed. It doubled sales of electric vehicles in 2018 compared with 2017, taking them to 4.5 per cent market share; has the largest electric bus fleet in the world with 400,000 vehicles; and a target for public transport to account for 30 per cent of motorised travel in urban centres by 2020.

Across the G20, the building sector performed particularly badly in 2018, with emissions soaring by 4.1 per cent, having broadly stabilised between 2005 and 2016. Electricity use in buildings comprises 18 per cent of energy-related CO2 emissions. This needs to be halved by 2030, and cut to around 80 per cent below 2010 levels by 2050.

Per capita emissions in the building sector rose between 2013 and 2018 in China, India, Indonesia and Russia, the study noted, with all these countries rating poorly in terms of policy in this area. Retrofitting existing buildings is challenging for all G20 countries. Only the EU, France and Germany have long-term strategies for retrofitting existing buildings, and even these are not compatible with the 1.5°C target.

Another major issue highlighted by the report is tax exemptions and budget support for fossil fuel infrastructure and production, with more than US$127 billion flowing from G20 nations in 2017. Although fossil fuel subsidies declined in nine of these, including China, India, Brazil, Argentina and Indonesia, the researchers caveat that this was partly due to falling prices.

Subsidies for natural gas have remained stable or increased in many countries, in spite of the lower prices, they noted. Diverting just a fraction of fossil fuel subsidies towards renewables could pay for the clean energy transition and reduce emissions significantly, the report states.

Overall, around half of G20 countries are projected to meet or overachieve their climate plans – known as nationally determined contributions (NDCs) – including China, India, Indonesia and the EU, the researchers found. However, many NDCs are too weak, and would take global temperature rise to 3C, they said.

All signatories of the Paris Agreement are expected to steadily ramp up the actions in their NDCs, with 2020 being the first deadline to do so.

“Overall CO2 emissions have gone up in all sectors, but we’re seeing some frontrunners emerging that others can learn from, like China’s policies for promoting electric vehicles and public transport,” said Lena Donat, one of the report’s lead authors.

“In order for the Paris Agreement to succeed, it is clear that the G20 countries need to be climate leaders and pave the way for solutions that developing countries can benefit from,” she added.

This story originally published by Chinadialogue under a Creative Commons’ License.

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