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emission reduction capers....
ONE OF THE MAJOR ISSUE IN REGARD TO GLOBAL WARMING IS THE WAY THE WEST — THE MAJOR POLLUTER/EMITTER OF CO2 WANTS TO SHARE RESPONSIBILITY/GUILT WITH THE REST OF THE WORLD.
IN THIS REGARD, GUS WOULD LIKE TO SEE NOT A COPXX BUT A WESTERN WORLD FINDING ITS OWN WAYS TO STOP CARRYING ON WITH ITS PRESENT OIL AND GAS MARKETS AND INDUSTRIAL STRUCTURE.
THE REST OF THE WORLD DOES NOT HAVE TO SHARE THIS GUILT TRIP, WHICH AT EVERY COPXX HAS BECOME THE NORM. CHINA IS DOING FAR MORE TO SOLVE ITS EMISSION PROBLEMS THAN THE USA, EMBROILED IN FOREVER WARS THAT PRODUCE MORE EMISSION THAT CAN BE SAVED BY CHANGING 650 BILLION LIGHT BULB….
SO IT IS ALWAYS ANNOYING TO SEE THE US LEAD THE WAY TO “SOLVE THE PROBLEM” WHICH THEY HAVE CREATED AND CANNOT SOLVE BECAUSE THEY ARE PERMANENTLY “AT WAR”…
…AND RADIOMAN, PLEASE STOP BLAMING RUSSIA FOR THE WAR IN UKRAINE — BLAME NATO.
MEANWHILE WE FIND THESE "CONFERENCES" A BIT CONDESCENDING:
Over a four-day summit in New York, from September 24-27, Yale scholars and other thought leaders in a wide range of fields came together to bring to the foreground solutions to confront the climate crisis. Hosted at the Yale Club in New York City, the ’Yale @ Climate Week‘ gathering coincided with Climate Week NYC and events surrounding the opening of the 79th session of UN General Assembly. Yale’s summit was organized by Yale Planetary Solutions, with support from the Whitney and Betty MacMillan Center for International and Area Studies. Throughout the summit, participants spoke to the importance of expanding and scaling up climate solutions. While climate change presents acute challenges, panelists emphasized the potential for collaboration, development, and capacity building around the world. In her opening remarks, Yale President Maurie McInnis highlighted the university’s efforts to address the climate crisis, especially the work of Yale Planetary Solutions, which she describes as the “north star” for all that Yale is and does regarding climate. “In the months to come, we intend to create more opportunities for the world’s most purpose-driven companies and organizations to engage with Yale and with its scholars,” McInnis said. “We have bold ambitions, supported by a community that is motivated, passionate, and prepared to invest in Yale’s trailblazing spirit and expand an international effort that guides humanity towards the solutions it needs to ensure the health and vibrancy of this planet.”
THE TOP EMITTERS OF WARMING GASES ARE IN THE WESTERN WORLD....
Globally, the top 10% of emitters were responsible for almost half of global energy-related CO2 emissions in 2021, compared with a mere 0.2% for the bottom 10%. The top 10% averaged 22 tonnes of CO2 per capita in 2021, over 200 times more than the average for the bottom 10%. There are 782 million people in the top 10% of emitters, extending well beyond traditional ideas of the super rich. By comparison, around 0.6% of the world – an estimated 46.8 million individuals – are considered millionaires or billionaires. The top 10% of emitters span all continents. Around 85% of them live in advanced economies – including Australia, Canada, the European Union, Japan, Korea, New Zealand, United States, and United Kingdom – and also in China. The rest are from the Middle East, Russia, and South Africa, in countries with relatively high income and wealth inequality and emissions-intensive fuel mixes. The bottom 10% of emitters globally live in developing economies in Africa and Asia, where they consume relatively small amounts of goods and services, and in many cases lack access to electricity and clean cooking.
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
“It’s hard to do cartoons without controversies…” Gus Leonisky
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profligate carbon....
Developing countries at COP 29 presented the Western world with an annual US$1trillion financial transfer bill for the cost of their profligate carbon fuelled global warming inducing industrialisation. That sum was no NGO rule of thumb figure but one produced by an organisation funded by Western governments themselves – the International Energy Agency, the world’s foremost body dealing with energy. Despite these credentials, the West saw fit to radically discount its bill by two thirds to US$300 billion.
The West’s miserliness is of its own making. That the cost is now so massive speaks for decades of inaction – of kicking the CO2 can down the road. We have now arrived ‘down the road’ and that we are obliged to pay for the climate change damage we have and will impose on the third world – in addition to our own massive climate change costs – is incontrovertible. Which is to say we of the wealthy West have been enriching ourselves at the expense of the third world by emitting way above our ‘rightful’ share of CO2 – that is, of the limited volume of emissions which can be emitted before we seriously cook the planet. We are nowhere being confronted in the Western press of this (Webb P and I July 18): of the fact that, on a cumulative basis since industrialisation, OECD countries have accounted for 60-70% of carbon emissions while accommodating a mere 17% of the globe’s population. India with 18% of global population accounts for a mere 3-4% of cumulative emissions. Even China’s cumulative emissions per capita have reached only around 75% of the global average while the US is around 5 to 6 times the average (Australia 4 times). And given that rising consumption is driving still rising emissions we should also be reminded that Australians, followed by the USA, Canada and Japan are globally the most profligate consumers per capita.
That climate inaction has delivered a quantum increase in the West’s bill for climate change mitigation and adaptation in third world countries is alarmingly quantified in a recent study in the prestigious journal Nature (The economic commitment of climate change | Nature). A globally stark climate change future is presented by an estimated global income reduction of 19% by 2050 based on climate change damage already in train – that is, notwithstanding if there were to be immediate and sustained drastic reductions in carbon emissions. The overall cost comes in at around $38 trillion.
Why the costs for third world countries are so high relates to their particular vulnerability to the effects of climate change. The Nature article shows that in the pipeline climate change damage “……is significantly larger in countries with smaller historical cumulative emissions, as well as in regions with lower current income per capita”. This, the authors conclude was demonstrably unjust. “This implies that those countries that will suffer the most from the damages already committed are those that are least responsible for climate change and which also have the least resources to adapt to it”.
Exactly why climate change imposes higher costs on third world countries relates to a number of factors. Many are located in the tropics and therefore suffer most from higher temperatures. They also typically have large agricultural sectors which are highly sensitive to climate change. The costs of mitigation in developing countries are also higher than in the developed world given higher costs of finance.
The bad news for the West in terms of its financial obligations does not unfortunately stop here. Other studies (The price of a changing climate: extreme weather and economic loss and damage in SIDS | ODI: Think change) indicate that even the IEA’s estimate of an annual US$1 trillion bill may be a serious underestimation given already extreme weather is costing at risk island nations US$141 billion each year and which could rise to US$1 trillion annually by 2030.
The obvious dilemma for Australia and other Western countries is that we are still kicking the now monstrously expensive carbon can further down an increasingly high cost road. This, at a time when our own national bill for mitigation and de-carbonisation is rising inexorably due to our inaction and when our badly flawed democracies are not delivering anywhere near the resources needed to impede reaching 1.5C. The prospect of grossly inadequate financial transfers to the third world in unsuitable forms is surely a recipe for a deepening east west cleavage and rising global insecurity. Such a future will be pretty well guaranteed if, as can be expected, Trump rejects any notion of financial responsibility and dries up climate change financial transfers to the third world.
https://johnmenadue.com/cop-29-grossly-inadequate-funding-signals-a-deepening-east-west-divide/
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.