lunes, 19 de diciembre de 2016

Nuestros mejores deseos - Our best wishes - Nos meilleurs voeux

En el cierre de un año indudablemente diferente -obviemos decir lo complicado que ha sido- hay cuestiones que no deberíamos dejar de apuntar: el poder expresarse más libremente, el resurgimiento del campo, el volver a formar parte del mundo como un todo y el impulso que la Argentina le está dando a las energías renovables. Los errores, ese vaso medio vacío,  es algo que señalan diariamente diversos medios (es su tarea) y no es  quizás el momento de reiterarlos.

A todos ustedes que de una manera u otra nos vienen siguiendo desde hace tiempo, Gracias por sus constructivas críticas y siempre valiosos aportes.

A todos, nuestros fervientes deseos de una Navidad en Paz.

Y gracias a todos aquellos que nos han enviado ya sus saludos navideños y a quienes no hemos podido aún responderles directamente.


 At the end of a year that is coming to an end surrounded by more unknowns that those with which it started, let us thank you, our friends, for your wise criticism and generous contributions.

To all of us who one way or another are involved in Sustainable Development, even with the unknowns surging after the US election, 2016 has shown a steady progress towards our sustainable development goals. We shall keep on striving towards all that remains to be done in 2017.

Our best wishes for a Xmas in Peace,


À vous qui suivez notre blog depuis 2012, merci de vos critiques constructives et vos sages commentaires. Du point de vue du développement durable, l'année ferme avec un gros point d'interrogation, même si durant 2016 le monde a fait pas mal de progrès en matière de changement climatique après la COP de Paris de 2015. Les énergies renouvelables aussi continuent à se développer, notamment chez nous en Argentine sous la nouvelle administration. 

On devra renouveler nos efforts en 2017.

Aujourd'hui, pour vous tous, nos meilleurs voeux pour un Nöel en Paix.


Mauricio López Dardaine
Maximiliano López Dardaine
Estudio López Dardaine

miércoles, 16 de noviembre de 2016

Les émissions mondiales de CO2 se stabilisent, mais le climat continue de s’emballer

SOURCE: Le Monde


Les émissions mondiales de CO2 se stabilisent, mais le climat continue de s’emballer


Le bilan annuel du Global Carbon Project montre l’effet positif du ralentissement de la consommation de charbon en Chine. Mais les émissions indiennes croissent fortement.


Bonne nouvelle sur le front du climat : les émissions mondiales de CO2, le principal gaz à effet de serre relâché par les activités humaines, ont stagné en 2015, et devraient rester quasiment stables en 2016. C’est ce qui ressort du bilan annuel publié lundi 14 novembre, à la veille de la réunion des chefs d’Etat à la conférence climatique de Marrakech (COP22), par le Global Carbon Project (GCP), un consortium scientifique sous l’égide de l’université britannique d’East Anglia.


Buenas noticias en el frente climático: las emisiones mundiales de  CO2  el principal gas de efecto invernadero liberado por las actividades humanas, se han estancado en 2015, y deberían quedar casi estables en 2016. Es la conclusión del balance anual publicado el lunes 14 de noviembre, víspera de la reunión de los jefes de estado en la COP22 de Marrakesh, por el Global Carbon Project, un consorcio científico que funciona bajo la égida de la universidad británica de East Anglia. [Como luego señala el artículo, no debemos olvidar que el anhidrido carbónico no es el único gas de efecto invernadero, y que por lo tanto no está aún asegurado el que no vayamos a perforar el techo de los 2 grados centígrados de aumento promedio de temperatura planetaria. Tampoco son del todo fiables las cifras de emisiones de China, el primer emisor mundial, cuya reducción en el empleo de carbón es en gran medida responsable por esta aparente atenuación. La India en cambio ha seguido aumentando sus respectivas emisiones del gas mencionado]. RECOMENDAMOS VER LOS GRAFICOS QUE INCLUYE ESTE ARTICULO. MLD

Ce tassement demeure insuffisant pour enrayer l’emballement de la machine climatique. Sans un changement rapide et radical de modèle énergétique, la planète se prépare à crever le plafond de 2 °C de réchauffement que s’est fixé la communauté internationale.
En 2015, les émissions de dioxyde de carbone issues de la combustion de ressources fossiles (charbon, pétrole et gaz) ainsi que des cimenteries se sont élevées à 36,3 milliards de tonnes (gigatonnes ou Gt), au même niveau qu’en 2014. Ce chiffre, note l’étude, « marque une rupture claire et inattendue par rapport à la forte progression des émissions (+ 2,3 % par an) au cours de la décennie 2004-2013 ». En 2014, la hausse avait déjà été contenue à 0,7 %. Pour 2016, les experts prévoient une augmentation modérée de 0,2 %, à 36,4 Gt.


Un plateau dans les émissions mondiales de CO2

Ce bilan ne prend toutefois pas en compte les émissions dues aux changements d’affectation des sols, en particulier à la déforestation. Ce sont ainsi 4,8 Gt de CO2 (soit 1 Gt de plus que la moyenne annuelle de la précédente décennie) qu’il faut ajouter au total, qui s’établit alors à 41,1 Gt.


La Chine contrebalancée par l’Inde


Le plateau observé pour les rejets carbonés dus aux combustibles fossiles et aux cimenteries, sur les trois années 2014, 2015 et 2016, n’en est pas moins remarquable, surtout quand on le compare à la croissance du produit intérieur brut (PIB) mondial, supérieur cette année à 3 %. « Après trois années d’augmentation modérée, il est possible que la trajectoire des émissions mondiales se décorrèle de manière permanente et à long terme du rythme de la croissance », écrivent les chercheurs.
Comment l’expliquer ? Dans une large mesure par la moindre consommation de charbon par la Chine. Le premier pays pollueur de la planète, responsable à lui seul de 29 % des émissions mondiales, a réduit ses rejets de 0,7 % alors qu’ils avaient grimpé de plus de 5 % par an au cours de la décennie antérieure. Dans le même temps, les émissions des Etats-Unis, qui pèsent pour 15 % du total, ont diminué de 2,6 %, en raison là aussi d’un recul de la part du charbon, remplacé par du pétrole et du gaz, moins nocifs pour le climat. A l’inverse, dans l’Europe des Vingt-Huit, qui pèse pour 10 %, les émissions sont reparties à la hausse (+ 1,4 %) après une longue décrue.

Des efforts très inégaux selon les pays

Le bénéfice de la relative sobriété charbonnière de la Chine est cependant contrebalancé par la forte croissance des émissions de l’Inde, qui ont bondi de 5,2 %, dans la lignée de la hausse continue des dernières décennies. C’est des deux géants asiatiques que va dépendre, pour beaucoup, la courbe future des gaz à effet de serre d’origine humaine.

« Une immense incertitude plane sur les prévisions concernant les émissions chinoises pour l’année 2016, du fait du manque de fiabilité des données », pointent les experts. Pour l’Inde, il n’existe « aucune prévision ». S’y ajoute désormais une inconnue supplémentaire, et de taille : celle de la politique énergétique du président élu américain, Donald Trump, qui a promis un nouvel âge d’or aux énergies fossiles.

martes, 15 de noviembre de 2016

COP22 UPDATE - COP22 MISE À JOUR

NOTE:

       Dear friends,

You must excuse this interrumption amidst the COP22 negotiations, but we have had trouble accessing our own blog. Most of you are bound to be following the procedures. However, I find it worth reading the following comments by ICTSD's Bridges. First, it covers the anxiety the US presidential election has caused among those attending the Conference. Then it concentrates on the question of Developing the Paris rulebook, now with the Paris Agreement already in force. Climate financing is also an issue being addressed.

Warm regards,

Estimados amigos,

Les pido disculpen esta interrupción de nuestro contacto justo en medio de las negociaciones de la COP22; ocurre que tuvimos serias dificultades para acceder a nuestro propio blog, ahora solucionadas.
Les recomiendo mucho tanto el comentario de Bridges de ICTSD desde Marrakesh, así como la postura del representante de los Estados Unidos, según Le Monde de hoy.

Un muy cordial saludo,

Mauricio López Dardaine

SOURCE: ICTSD Bridges

"Negotiators gathering in Marrakech, Morocco, for the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change’s (UNFCCC) annual conference have made steady progress during their first week of talks, as they prepare for the arrival of government leaders and ministers for various high-level meetings in the coming days.
However, the news of Donald Trump’s election win in the United States has cast a shadow of uncertainty over the larger prospects for tackling the global challenge of a warming planet, while also prompting many nations and US-based non-state and sub-national actors to affirm that they will press on with climate action regardless of what may happen in Washington.

Since the talks began on Monday 7 November, the number of parties who have ratified the Paris Agreement on climate change has now risen to 109, covering 77 percent of global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and including major emitters such as Australia and Japan.

Answering reporters’ questions over whether his country would follow Trump’s lead should the latter go through on his campaign pledge to exit the Paris accord, Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull countered that leaving the UN deal would take four years for any country, and stressed Australia’s dedication to the accord.
“When Australia makes a commitment to a global agreement, we follow through and that is exactly what we are doing,” he said.
Trump previously promised on the campaign trail to “cancel” the US’ involvement in the Paris accord. His transition website does not currently refer to this pledge, though he has reportedly asked Myron Ebell of the Competitive Enterprise Institute to lead the transition efforts for the US Environmental Protection Agency. Ebell is a long-standing and prominent sceptic of the seriousness of global warming and critic of President Barack Obama’s climate action work.
Trump’s transition website reaffirms many campaign pledges to unravel Obama’s domestic climate actions, including the Clean Power Plan, claiming these will massively increase electricity costs “without any measurable effect on Earth’s climate.” However, the site says that Trump does support renewable energy, along with sources such as fossil fuels, in a bid to make the US fully energy independent.
The website leaves several questions unanswered, such as how he will address the Environmental Goods Agreement (EGA), a planned tariff-cutting deal being negotiated by 17 WTO members, including the US. A ministerial meeting aimed at concluding the EGA is planned for 3-4 December, before Trump takes office. In related news, EU trade ministers meeting in Brussels just days after the US election affirmed that they still anticipate developments on the EGA by year’s end. A considerable political effort however remains to be done to address the concerns of certain members.
Officials in Marrakech have rebuffed the suggestion that the incoming Trump Administration would put the ongoing COP negotiations at risk. Sources confirm that while the US election results may have affected negotiators’ mood, it has not hindered progress.
“The Trump election is not a threat for the success of COP22,” said Salaheddine Mezouar at Saturday’s press conference. The Moroccan Minister of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation is the president of this year’s climate gathering. “We have to have trust in the American people, who are strongly committed and strongly determined in the fight against global warming.”
The years 2011-2015 were the warmest on record, according to the World Meteorological Organization, which circulated a related report at the COP. The agency also reviewed cases where human-induced climate change was a factor in extreme weather events, causing thousands of deaths and economic losses worth billions of dollars, in places as disparate as Southeast Asia and the United States.


Developing the Paris rulebook

With the Paris Agreement now in force, negotiators under the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Paris Agreement (APA) held regular, constructive discussions this week to help prepare for the upcoming meeting of the accord’s governing body, the Conference of the Parties serving as the meeting of the parties to the Agreement (CMA).
Issues covered included further guidance on countries’ individual climate action plans; adaptation communication; the transparency framework for action and support; the future global stocktakes on collective progress; and the committee to facilitate implementation and promote compliance. The question of whether the existing Adaptation Fund for supporting developing countries should also serve the Paris Agreement was reportedly taken up.
The APA co-chairs noted the advances and successful technical work so far. The APA is meant to hold its closing plenary on Monday, though some have expressed interest in continuing talks informally. No consensus had emerged on this option by press time.


Climate finance: greater investments needed

Climate finance flows from public and private actors have shown some promising advances, though are still well below necessary levels, according to a biennial report by the UNFCCC’s Standing Committee on Finance.
“Without the needed financial flows, both the Paris Agreement and the [Sustainable Development Goals] will largely remain a promise rather a transformative reality,” said UNFCCC Executive Secretary Patricia Espinosa upon the report’s release this past week.
The report found that global climate finance flows averaged per year at US$714 billion in 2013-2014. Despite this improvement, it said that these are just a fraction of investment overall – and that much more financing is being dedicated to “high-carbon” energy. The report also noted the difficulties in obtaining and analysing the relevant data, given the range of funding sources; the varying definitions of “climate finance;” and other related limitations for reporting and tracking.
Furthermore, mitigation-related funding is vastly outpacing support aimed at adapting to climate-inflicted damage, according to the committee document. The report is slated to feature in the high-level ministerial dialogue on climate finance – including on adaptation-related aid – being held during the second week. Negotiators have also held workshops and informal meetings this week aiming to help clarify ways to improve climate finance-related accounting, as well as how to make data gathering more predictable and usable..."

SOURCE: Le Monde


Climat : le négociateur en chef des Etats-Unis défend l’accord de Paris

Jonathan Pershing a promis que l’action climatique se poursuivrait jusqu’au terme du mandat d’Obama. La journée des chefs d’Etat de la COP22 se tient mardi à Marrakech.


L’envoyé spécial américain Jonathan Pershing lors de son point presse à Marrakech, lundi 14 novembre.

Deux options se présentaient à l’équipe de négociations américaine face au séisme que constitue pour elle l’élection à la Maison Blanche d’un président ouvertement climatosceptique. Se faire discrète dans les allées de la 22e conférence des Nations unies pour le climat (COP22) à Marrakech, au Maroc, ou au contraire réaffirmer son attachement à la mise en œuvre de l’accord de Paris pour lequel Washington a joué, jusqu’ici, un rôle décisif. Lundi 14 novembre, elle a opté pour la deuxième solution lors de la conférence de presse sans doute la plus suivie de ce début de deuxième semaine de COP22.


L’envoyé spécial des Etats-Unis pour le changement climatique, Jonathan Pershing, seul à la tribune, a réaffirmé que la lutte contre le réchauffement de la planète reste une « top priorité » du président Barack Obama et que « le contexte créé à Paris [avec la signature d’un accord universel, le 12 décembre 2015, en toute fin de COP21reflète la demande mondiale pour l’action en faveur du climat ».« La question n’est pas de savoir s’il faut renforcer l’action mais quand et comment » le faire, a insisté le diplomate.
Nommé en avril à la tête des négociateurs américains en remplacement de Todd Stern, ce géologue de formation – qui a été l’un des auteurs du rapport du Groupe d’experts intergouvernemental sur l’évolution du climat, le GIEC, en 2007 – n’a pas l’intention de quitterle navire. S’il ne connaît pas les membres de la future équipe de Donald Trump dans ce dossier, avec lesquels il devra mener à bien la transition, il a rappelé aussi que ses fonctions ne prendraient fin qu’en janvier 2020.

lunes, 7 de noviembre de 2016

COP22 - principaux enjeux - principales cuestiones en juego

·      Quels sont les principaux enjeux de la COP22 ?

·      ¿Cuáles son las principales cuestiones que están en juego en la COP22?

Par/por Simon Roger

Source/fuente: Le Monde





« Le gros sujet de la COP22 sera de préciser les règles de mise en œuvre de l’accord de Paris et de se mettre d’accord sur la date de finali­sation de ces règles communes », prédit Laurence ­ Tubiana, l’ambassadrice chargée des négociations sur le changement climatique pour la France. L’entrée en vigueur étant effective depuis le 4 novembre, la première réunion des parties à l’accord de Paris (la CMA dans le vocabulaire onusien, sigle de COP serving as Meeting of the Parties to the Paris Agreement) sera donc convoquée dès la COP22.

“La principal cuestión de la COP22 será definir las reglas para la puesta en marcha del Acuerdo de París y ponerse de acuerdo sobre la fecha de finalización de estas reglas comunes”, predice Laurence Tabiana, la embajadora a cargo de las negociaciones sobre cambio climático para Francia. Siendo la entrada en vigencia efectiva a partir de este 4 de noviembre pasado, la primera reunión de las Partes del Acuerdo de París (CMA) será pues convocada a partir de la COP22.

CMA

(article 16)
The Conference of the Parties serving as the meeting of the Parties to the Paris Agreement, known as the CMA, will make decisions under the agreement.
La Conferencia de las Partes que sirve como reunión de las Partes del Acuerdo de París, conocida como CMA, tomará las decisiones según el acuerdo.


Cette CMA s’ouvrira le 15 novembre, journée lors de laquelle plusieurs chefs d’Etat et de gouvernement sont attendus à Marrakech, dont François Hollande  et le secrétaire d’Etat américain John Kerry. La proposition suivante y sera défendue : puisque la nouvelle organisation se met en place plus vite que prévu, pourquoi ne pas finaliser la discussion sur les règles communes dès 2018, l’année du point d’étape prévu par l’accord climat ?

Esta CMA se abrirá el 15 de noviembre, jornada a partir de la cual muchos jefes de estado son esperados en Marakech, entre los cuales François Hollande y el secretario de estado estadounidense John Kerry. La siguiente propuesta será defendida: puesto que la nueva organización está lista antes de lo previsto ¿por qué no finalizar el debate sobre las reglas comunes a partir de 2018, el año de verificación previsto para el acuerdo sobre el clima?



L’autre enjeu de la COP22 est de faire le point sur les engagements volontaires pris par les pays pour réduire leurs émissions de gaz à effet de serre et contrer les effets du réchauffementMises bout à bout, ces 189 « contributions nationales » développées à l’horizon 2025-2030 ne permettent pas de contenir le réchauffement sous le seuil de 2 °C. La COP22 devrait inviter les Etats à engager des actions additionnelles pour rehausser le niveau de leurs ambitions.

La otra cuestión en juego en la COP22 es hacer un balance de los compromisos voluntarios tomados por los países para reducir las emisiones de gases de efecto invernadero y contrarrestrar los efectos del calentamiento. Sumadas, estas 189 “contribuciones nacionales” proyectadas al horizonte 2025-2030 no permiten contener el calentamiento global debajo del umbral de los 2°C. La COP22 debería invitar que los estados se comprometan a encarar acciones adicionales para elevar el nivel de sus ambiciones.

Depuis la COP21, de nombreuses dynamiques ont vu le jour : l’alliance solaire internationale, l’initiative africaine pour les énergies renouvelables, la mission innovation, la coalition pour le prix du carbone, etc. Face à la difficulté de dresser un bilan de ces initiatives, la ministre de l’environnement marocaine, Hakima El Haite, et Laurence Tubiana vont proposer à Marrakech qu’un dispositif de suivi de ces coalitions soit mis sur pied d’ici à mai 2017, autour de critères précis et d’un registre d’enregistrement.

A partir de la COP21, varias dinámicas han visto la luz del día: la alianza solar internacional, la iniciativa africana para energías renovables, la misión innovación, la coalición para el precio del carbono, etc. Frente a la divicultad de realizar un inventario de estas iniciativas, la ministra de ambiente de Marruecos, Hakima El Haite, y Laurence Tubiana, van a proponer a Marakech que se arme un dispositivo de seguimiento de estas coaliciones de aquí a marzo de 2017, alrededor de criterios precisos y de un registro de inscripción.

Au Maroc, les délégations devraient évoquer la lancinante question des financements. Les pays en développement gardent notamment en tête la promesse faite à leur égard, en 2009, par les nations industrialisées : mobiliser au moins 100 milliards de dollars (90 milliards d’euros) par an, d’ici à 2020, de financement climat du Nord vers le Sud. Rendue publique le 17 octobre, à la veille de la pré-COP22, une expertise de l’Organisation de coopération et de développement économiques (OCDE) estime que le financement (public et privé) pourrait atteindre entre 77 milliards et 133 milliards de dollars suivant les scénarios.
En Marruecos las delegaciones deberían abordar la lacerante cuestión del financiamiento. Los países en desarrollo siguen teniendo muy presente la promesa que les fuera hecha, en 2009, por las naciones industrializadas: movilizar por lo menos 100 mil millones de dólares por año, de aquí a 2020, de financiamiento para el clima de Norte a Sur. El 17 de octubre un informe de la OECD hecho  público la víspera de la pre-COP22, estima que el financiamiento -público y pr ivado-  podría alcanzar entre 77 y 133 mil millones de dólares según los escenarios…



domingo, 9 de octubre de 2016

Comentarios para un fin de semana largo

Esta semana ha sido pródiga en hechos significativos para nuestra América. En el Sur el acuerdo firmado el 4 de octubre entre el Uruguay y Chile, un acuerdo de última generación, hizo que la Cámara de Exportadores de la República Argentina publicara un comunicado pidiendo al gobierno de nuestro país que impulsara cambios en el Mercosur (del cual el Uruguay es uno de los socios fundadores) para que el bloque pueda adaptarse al ritmo de estos nuevos tiempos.
Un poco más al norte el presidente de Colombia recibió el Premio Nobel de la Paz,  luego de su muy reciente derrota en las urnas del domingo anterior.
Aún un poco más al norte, el blooper pasado de Donald Trump puso un inmenso signo de interrogación sobre su candidatura a presidente de los Estados Unidos..
Si volvemos hacia el sur, en Buenos Aires se celebró la reunión del BID donde asistimos y participamos  de un apasionante debate sobre el futuro Inter-Americano.
Cruzando el Atlántico (y pueden leer ustedes al respecto en este blog en el comentario inmediatamente anterior  a éste) la premier británica marcó la cancha para el inicio de la negociación para la separación del Reino Unido de la Unión Europea, fijando marzo próximo como la fecha para que Gran Bretaña comience a cumplir con el mandato del Brexit.
Si todo esto ha ocurrido en apenas una semana, es una clara señal que este nuevo futuro que estamos creando los ciudadanos del Siglo XXI va a seguir deparando sorpresas.
Quizás este fin de semana largo que tenemos por delante los argentinos, entre otros ciudadanos de América, sea propicio para meditar cuál será nuestro aporte a estos tiempos que no parecen tener pausa.


Mauiricio López Dardaine

jueves, 6 de octubre de 2016

UK Premier Sets Deadline for Starting EU Exit Negotiations

UK Premier Sets Deadline for Starting EU Exit Negotiations

6 October 2016

Source: Bridges
UK Prime Minister Theresa May announced on Sunday that she will formally request the start of negotiations for exiting the European Union by late March of next year, confirming again that the island nation will indeed proceed with a so-called “Brexit” despite some pending domestic legal challenges.
In a speech to the Conservative Conference, May also gave a broad outline of what the UK will be seeking as part of its exit package when it triggers “Article 50,” the provision in the Treaty of Lisbon which allows for an existing EU member to negotiate their way out of the bloc.
The news comes as leaders from the remaining “EU 27” begin work on charting their own path as a group, without the UK – a process that is due for completion in March, the same month that May has set as a deadline for submitting the Article 50 notification. (See Bridges Weekly, 15 September 2016 and 22 September 2016)
Under the Treaty of Lisbon, any EU member who wishes to exit the bloc must formally notify the European Council of its intent to do so. This then starts a two-year window for negotiations between that country and the rest of the European Union, represented by the Council. A final agreement will require a “qualified majority” on the Council side, as well as the signoff from the European Parliament.
Should a deal not be reached within two years, the UK will be forced to leave the EU, unless all parties agree to extend the negotiations.
May: “No unnecessary delays”
Any announcements about the timetable of the “Brexit” negotiations have been closely watched since the June referendum, given both the political and policy implications for the European bloc. Fellow EU leaders have repeatedly urged the UK to proceed as promptly as possible in order to limit the economic fall-out that may otherwise arise from a period of prolonged uncertainty. (See Bridges Weekly, 15 September 2016)
Speaking to the Conservative Party conference last week, May said that “there will be no unnecessary delays in invoking Article 50.” She clarified, however, that the UK will do so when it is fully ready.
Procedurally, she also sought to clarify which entities on the UK side would be responsible for submitting the Article 50 notification to the European Council, arguing that this will be a process conducted by the UK government – not either of the Houses of Parliament.
She also attempted to counter the suggestion that both the House of Lords and the House of Commons would need to agree on triggering Article 50 – as some critics have suggested.
“When it legislated to establish the referendum, Parliament put the decision to leave or remain inside the EU in the hands of the people. And the people gave their answer with emphatic clarity,” she said, pledging to fight against domestic legal challenges on the subject.
The UK premier also said that while the government will consult with “devolved administrations” in Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales, it will ultimately be up to the UK government itself to conduct the negotiations.
Scotland and Northern Ireland had voted in favour to stay in the EU, and a legal challenge is underway in the latter to determine whether a parliamentary vote is needed to proceed with “Brexit.”
Already the uncertainty prompted by the “Brexit” vote last June has led some international financial institutions to downgrade their growth predictions for the UK, along with having broader implications for the global economy.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) said this week that investor confidence has taken a hit in the wake of the UK referendum, with the Washington-based institution predicting that the UK will see growth slow from 2.2 percent in 2015 to 1.8 percent in 2016 and 1.7 percent in 2017.
Soft or hard Brexit: “False dichotomy”
Whether leaving the EU will entail a “soft” or “hard” Brexit has also been the subject of much speculation over the past several months, with fears of the latter scenario already causing the pound sterling’s value to drop this week to levels not seen in over three decades.
A “hard” Brexit is one that would limit in some way the UK’s level of access to the EU single market, while a “soft” Brexit has been interpreted as one that is more similar to the country’s current relationship with the European Union.
However, casting it as a choice between the two sets up a “false dichotomy” that must be put aside, the UK premier said. Rather, striking a deal that will restore UK sovereignty while at the same time ensuring good trading terms with the 27 other EU member states should not be considered a “trade-off.”
“The process we are about to begin is not about negotiating all of our sovereignty away again. It is not going to be about any of those matters over which the country has just voted to regain control,” said the UK premier.
She also ruled out using a so-called “Norway” or “Switzerland” model in establishing a new UK-EU relationship, as some experts have suggested. May said instead that London will pursue its own approach, suitable to its own needs.
An ideal arrangement, she said, would be one featuring free trade and goods and services. “I want [the deal] to give British companies the maximum freedom to trade with and operate in the single market – and let European businesses do the same here.”
However, she pledged that the UK would not yield control of immigration in the process, nor would it subject itself to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice.
“As ever with international talks, it will be a negotiation… But make no mistake: this is going to be a deal that works for Britain,” she said.
From EU to British law
One of the many questions prompted by the “Brexit” vote has been how the UK will extricate itself from the vast body of EU laws and regulations that has been developed over the last several decades.
May sought to clarify how this process would work during her speech on Sunday, confirming that the repeal of the European Communities Act would also include language that would convert existing EU law into British law.
From there, she suggested, the UK’s Parliament will be able to then make changes to any laws, once these have gone through the necessary legislative reviews and debates. Current workers’ rights will remain legally protected under her administration, she added.
This ability to change those laws, however, will be “subject to international agreements and treaties with other countries and the EU on matters such as trade.”
Indeed, while the UK relationship with the EU single market has been one of the dominant questions in the overall “Brexit” debate, how the UK will navigate its relationship with the WTO as well as with those countries who have existing or planned trade deals with the European Union will also be key issues going forward.
The United Kingdom is already a member of the Geneva-based World Trade Organization in its own right. However, the European Commission currently conducts trade policy on behalf of its member states, and the UK’s commitments at the WTO are expressed as part of the EU’s overall commitments, rather than being broken down by member state.
UK Trade Minister Liam Fox has said that he aims to see his country’s WTO relationship – particularly in addressing its “schedules” on goods and services as an individual member, rather than part of the EU – resolved with as little “disruption” to global trade as possible.
“We will want to see a position on WTO schedules adopted in a way that causes minimal disruption. That is not an entirely simple process, and we would never pretend that it is, but neither is it an insoluble riddle,” he told the Huffington Post last weekend.
ICTSD reporting; “POLITICO Brexit Files: Sterling low FTSE high – EP red lines – Brexit breakfast,” POLITICO, 4 October 2016; “Theresa May is right to offer clarity on Brexit timetable,” FINANCIAL TIMES, 2 October 2016; “Theresa May sets Brexit course away from EU single market,” FINANCIAL TIMES, 2 October 2016; “May puts UK on course for sector-by-sector deals on EU trade access,” FINANCIAL TIMES, 2 October 2016; “Northern Ireland considers whether Brexit requires parliament vote,” REUTERS, 4 October 2016; “Britain’s Fox says wants new Brexit WTO terms with minimal disruption,” REUTERS, 2 October 2016.

jueves, 29 de septiembre de 2016

Following our previous comment - here is "Bridge's" Report on the Paris Climate Deal

Paris Climate Deal Nears Ratification Threshold, Other Meetings Ahead

29 September 2016
The new Paris Agreement on climate change – secured last December in the French capital after which it is named – has been ratified by 61 nations, crossing the first of two thresholds required for it to come into effect. The news has raised expectations that the landmark accord could come online in the next few months.
“I am confident that, by the time I leave office, the Paris Agreement will have entered into force. This will be a major achievement for multilateralism,” said UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon following a high-level event on the Paris Agreement held on Wednesday 21 September at UN headquarters in New York. Ban’s term will end on 31 December this year. 
Last week’s dedicated New York meeting saw 31 countries simultaneously deposit their instruments for ratification for the deal. The Paris Agreement requires ratification by 55 countries accounting for 55 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions. At press time, emissions covered by the current ratifications stand at 47.9 percent.
Other major emitters have also recently signalled plans to ratify soon. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Sunday that the country would approve the deal on 2 October. The country accounts for just under seven percent of global emissions, according to the World Resources Institute (WRI).
Leaders from the EU’s member states indicated earlier this month their own plans to fast-track ratification of the global climate accord. The UK – which did not participate in the informal summit, which was geared towards the further development of the EU once the island nation has left – has also confirmed plans to ratify this year. (See Bridges Weekly, 22 September 2016)
EU environment ministers are due to agree on the bloc’s conclusion of the Paris Agreement on Friday, a step that would enable the EU Council to adopt a decision for the group to ratify the accord, in consent with the European Parliament. Insiders hope that this process will be concluded by early October.
In theory, this would mean that the EU as a whole – which accounts for around 10 percent of global emissions – would join the deal, although formal ratification by individual member states would also be required. This is due to the division of collective and individual responsibilities for the Paris Agreement’s implementation. Austria, France, Germany, Hungary, and Slovakia have already completed these domestic processes.
Reports surfaced this week, however, that Poland was conditioning its support for the EU process on other member states taking into account its coal-reliant energy system. This could come into play as the EU identifies how to share out its emissions-reduction commitments for sectors not covered by its carbon market. (See Bridges Weekly, 28 July 2016)
An estimated 79 countries are likely to have ratified the deal by the end of the year, accounting for approximately 62 percent of global emissions, according to a monitoring effort by non-profit group Climate Analytics of expressed public intentions.
Towards implementation
The Paris Agreement under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) requires individual parties to submit nationally determined climate action plans. While there is an obligation to have a climate plan, the deal is not prescriptive about what these should entail, nor the level of such commitments.
The structure, hailed as an innovative step forward after previous failed attempts to clinch a global climate pact, has been criticised by some as having the potential to be ineffective for the scale of the challenge faced. Several other experts, however, say that how effective the Paris deal is in practice will depend largely on its implementation.
“If enough countries start implementing the Paris agreement, historians will see this as a watershed moment,” Erik Solheim, Executive Director the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), told the New York Times. “But if we don’t implement it, this will just be bringing a bunch of politicians together around a piece of paper.”
Work on operationalising the Paris Agreement – including hammering out key details around accounting deadlines and transparency arrangements – will continue at the UNFCCC’s Twenty-second Conference of the Parties (COP22). This year’s meeting will be held in Marrakesh, Morocco, from 7-18 November.
Other major climate results ahead
Several other major climate-related meetings featuring on the agenda ahead of COP22 are expected to yield important outcomes with significant economic ramifications.
The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) kicked off its 10-day General Assembly proceedings in Montreal, Canada, on Tuesday, with the hope of securing agreement on a global market-based measure (MBM) to reduce carbon emissions from international air travel.
As of Thursday, over 60 states representing more than 81 percent of international aviation activity had agreed to participate in the pilot voluntary phase of a proposed MBM, due to run from 2021-2023. The proposed MBM, envisaged as a carbon offsetting and reduction scheme, is outlined in a working paper released by the ICAO Council in early September.
A subsequent phase would run from 2024-2026, applicable to states that participated in the pilot scheme, as well as others that choose to opt-in. All states will then participate from 2027-2035, unless accorded specific any specific “exemptions.” (See Bridges Weekly, 7 September 2016)
“This will be the first global agreement of its kind for an industrial sector. We are committed to carbon neutral growth from 2020,” said Alexandre de Juniac, Director General and CEO of the International Air Transport Association (IATA) in a press release supporting the development.  
The 191-member ICAO agreed in 2013 to outline an international aviation emissions reduction platform in time for its triennial assembly this year. The Paris Agreement covers neither emissions from international aviation nor shipping, with the two sectors together accounting for an estimated four percent of global emissions. These are growing at fast pace, scientists warn. 
For its part, the International Maritime Organization’s (IMO) Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC) is scheduled to meet from 24-28 October, where a working group will discuss possible emissions-reduction related steps for international shipping.
Also in October, parties to the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer will meet from 10-14 October in Kigali, Rwanda, with a view to addressing climate-warming hydrofluorocarbon (HFC) emissions.
Used as coolants in refrigerators and air conditioners, HFCs have a warming potential over 1000 times stronger than carbon dioxide, but were initially deployed by the countries as an alternative to ozone-depleting hydrochloroflurocarbons (HCFCs) targeted for elimination by the Montreal Protocol.
According to the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), should these HFC emissions continue to escalate, their effects could significantly undermine the benefits that have resulted from cutting back on ozone-depleting substances under the existing Montreal accord.
Following years of debate on whether to address HFCs under the UNFCCC or under Montreal as a consequence of the HCFC phase out, countries ultimately agreed last November to negotiate an amendment to the Montreal Protocol by 2016. Discussions this year have focused on setting the baseline levels for reduction, determining “freeze dates” for production and consumption, as well as how to navigate an eventual phase out altogether. (See BioRes, 27 July 2016)
Both the US and China have thrown their weight behind reaching an deal this year on an HFC amendment to the Montreal Protocol, while over 100 countries last week backed a statement calling for an ambitious outcome at the Kigali meet that includes an early freeze date for developed countries and an ambitious phase down schedule for all.
Carbon pricing gap
Even as good news filtered in on the Paris Agreement, a study released this week by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) found an estimated 80.1 gap between the effective price on carbon in 41 countries surveyed and the level needed to keep global temperatures below a two degree Celsius warming from pre-industrial levels. Countries covered by the study represent about 80 percent of global emissions.
The study also found that 60 percent of emissions from energy use are not covered by an effective carbon rate and just ten percent are priced at a high enough level to avoid the worst impacts from climate change. 
“Current carbon prices are falling short of the levels needed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions driving climate change, but even moderate price increases could have a significant impact, according to new OECD research,” the Paris-based agency said in a press release emailed to journalists.
Many experts argue that pricing carbon into economic activity will be key part of capturing the external cost of fossil fuel use and helping the transition towards low-carbon sources. While the number of carbon pricing schemes has increasingly significantly over the past few years, concerns around competitiveness and “carbon leakage” between countries have also grown in a world characterised by global production and asymmetric climate commitments.
In other words, some stakeholders fear that selective, ambitious carbon pricing may prove ineffective if firms move production and associated emissions elsewhere. One promising possibility suggested by some experts would be for countries to link carbon markets, a path already pursued by some, and envisaged as an option in the Paris Agreement.
The Carbon Pricing Disclosure (CDP) project also recently released a survey which found that while 370 companies in 14 high-emitting industries were adopting internal carbon pricing strategies, another 500 had no plans to do so. The report’s findings are based on disclosures by some 5000 companies from various regions and sectors.

ICTSD reporting; “Paris Climate Deal Passes Milestone as 20 More Nations Sign On,” THE NEW YORK TIMES, 21 September 2016; “India to ratify Paris Agreement on climate change on Oct.2,” THE HINDU, 26 September 2016; “Poland raises coal needs in EU climate push,” THE FINANCIAL TIMES, 27 September 2016; “Explainer: When will the European Union ratify the Paris Agreement?” CARBON BRIEF, 23 June 2016.

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