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- Subject: Tiempo Issue #6 - Sept. 1992 (74K)
-
- TIEMPO
- a bulletin on global warming and the Third World
-
- issue 6 September 1992
-
- published by the International Institute for Environment and
- Development (London, UK) and the University of East
- Anglia (Norwich, UK)
-
- editorial office: TIEMPO, c/o Mick Kelly, School of
- Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich
- NR4 7TJ, UK (email gn:crunorwich)
-
- in this issue
-
-
- feature:
- A step in the right direction?
-
- forum:
- Energy and environment
-
- feature:
- Whose Common Future?
-
- interview:
- The politics of the environment
-
- conferences:
- Details of international conferences
-
- feature:
- Sea level rise on China's coastal plains
-
- news:
- A Weather Eye on.....
- Confronting climate change
- Tiempo Resource Service
- Latest on the eruption of Pinatubo
-
-
- ************************************************************
- EDITORIAL
-
- As the hot air disperses in the aftermath of the Earth
- Summit, we begin this issue of TIEMPO with an
- assessment of the Framework Convention on Climate
- Change. While the fact that the convention exists at all
- must be considered a major achievement, it is clear that
- there is still a considerable way to go before many critical
- issues are resolved, particularly the issue of equity
- between North and South, rich and poor.
-
- The attitude of the United States was considered by many
- as a substantial block to progress in Rio. Alan Miller
- discusses the possible reasons why the Bush
- Administration was reluctant to cooperate, including the
- influence of the forthcoming Presidential election.
-
- Forum highlights the difficulties facing African nations in
- reconciling development needs, specifically the growing
- demand for energy, and environmental protection. Thomas,
- Sokona and Diallo call for a continent-wide strengthening of
- negotiating capacities in order to ensure that alternative
- strategies emerge.
-
- Moving from mitigation to adaptation, Han Mukang
- considers the potential impact of sea level rise on China's
- vulnerable coastal plains, concluding that 73 million people
- may be affected. He describes the means by which local
- industries and communities have met the cost and dealt
- with the environmental consequences of coastal protection.
-
- Finally, Mount Pinatubo has also been contributing hot air
- to the Earth's atmosphere in recent months. With global
- cooling evident since late 1991, we report on the latest
- estimates of the climatic impact of last year's gigantic
- eruption.
- ************************************************************
- A STEP IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION?
-
- MICK KELLY and SARAH GRANICH of the TIEMPO
- editorial team discuss the Framework Convention on
- Climate Change.
-
- One hundred years after the Swedish scientist Arrhenius
- warned that coal-burning might lead to climate change, it is
- time to take stock. The world has warmed by 0.5 C and we
- now have a Framework Convention on Climate Change.
- But will this treaty help or hinder humanity's response to
- the fundamental threat of global warming?
-
- The intensely political process of drafting the convention
- has revealed just how far we have to go before a common
- future can be guaranteed. The result is a text not so much
- characterized by compromise than by an effort to avoid the
- resolution of conflicting positions through vagueness and
- ambiguity.
-
- The stated objective of the convention is the stabilization
- of greenhouse gas concentrations... at a level which would
- prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the
- climate system. This should be achieved within a time
- frame sufficient to allow ecosystems to adapt naturally..., to
- ensure that food production is not threatened and to enable
- economic development to proceed in a sustainable
- manner.
-
- Setting aside the fact that humanity may already have
- changed climate beyond the bounds at which dangerous
- interference is inevitable, the vagueness of this objective
- creates ample opportunity for endless negotiation on
- subsequent protocols.
-
- As any scientist could have informed the negotiators,
- defining a level of global change within which ecosystem
- adaptation can occur naturally is near-impossible. Food
- production is already threatened by climate change in
- many parts of the world who is to decide whether this is
- the result of natural or anthropogenic processes? Whose
- economic development should be allowed to proceed in a
- sustainable manner? And how will sustainable be defined.
-
- But it is on the issue of control targets that the convention
- is at its most confused and convoluted. The only apparent
- indication of an explicit target for the industrialized world is
- in Article 4, Commitments , which at one point refers to
- the aim of returning [greenhouse gas emissions]
- individually or jointly to their 1990 levels. Careful reading,
- though, reveals that the only firm commitment here is that
- developed countries should report on progress towards the
- end of stabilization not that they should necessarily achieve
- this end.
-
- The other reference to stabilization in this section is
- curious: the return by the end of the present decade to
- earlier levels of anthropogenic emissions will demonstrate
- that developed nations are taking the lead in modifying
- longer-term trends... consistent with the objective of the
- Convention.
-
- Again, there is no firm commitment here but there is
- perhaps an implicit recognition of the power of the position
- many Third World nations have taken on climate change
- limited involvement unless those developed nations with
- historical responsibility for the problem take action first. Is
- the primary motivation for stabilization on the part of the
- industrialized world concern for the planetary environment
- or a less than altruistic fear that rising emissions in
- developing nations may exacerbate the problem in decades
- to come?
-
- In fact, stabilization of fossil carbon emissions may not
- prove a particularly convincing achievement as little growth
- may occur in many industrialized nations to the end of the
- century with or without government intervention. Even if the
- OECD nations meet this target, the rate of warming to
- 2100 will only be reduced by five per cent or so.
- Stabilization represents little more than a commitment to
- business as usual .
-
- For many of the world's population, though, it is not
- controlling greenhouse gas emissions that is the priority but
- ensuring adequate protection from the impact of climate
- change and sea level rise. Even with drastic cuts in
- emissions, global warming is to some degree inevitable.
-
- This point was made many times during the negotiations,
- particularly by Third World delegates. That no mention is
- made of the importance of facilitating human adaptation in
- the stated objective of the convention is a lamentable
- deficiency.
-
- Third World delegates also repeatedly stressed their
- opposition to the Global Environment Facility (GEF) as the
- body responsible for the convention finances. The net
- result? Mention of the GEF was shifted from Article 11 to
- Article 21 with its role re-presented as an interim
- arrangement .
-
- To be positive, the historic responsibility of the
- industrialized nations in creating the problem is
- acknowledged in the convention, as is the extreme
- vulnerability of the Third World. The challenge faced by
- developing nations in ensuring that growth does not
- increase their contribution to global warming to an
- unacceptable level is recognized. Moreover, the convention
- clearly endorses the need for precautionary action
- regardless of remaining uncertainties. But the
- overwhelming impression is of a document based largely
- on the self-interest of the powerful sprinkled with a few
- concessions to ensure the compliance of the rest.
-
- There is no evidence that the world's politicians have
- understood the true import of climate change and its
- implications for the development process. And that is the
- main problem with the Framework Convention on Climate
- Change. Even a statement of principle alone, with no firm
- commitments, would have been preferable if it recognized
- the full significance of global warming and provided a clear
- agenda for action. As it is, we are left with an ambiguous
- document which will allow politicians to fiddle on as the
- world steadily warms.
-
- Has the effort expended on developing the climate treaty
- been worthwhile? Whatever its limitations, the convention
- clearly signals that the world's politicians are taking global
- warming seriously whether as a result of genuine concern,
- defensiveness or fear. And, however cynical one might be
- about the many phrases inserted into the treaty to meet the
- demands of special interest groups, the overarching social,
- economic and geopolitical issues that climate change
- raises have been aired and a forum created in which some
- resolution may ultimately prove possible.
-
- The climate treaty represents a tentative first step whether
- or not it is a step in the right direction remains to be seen.
-
- BOX:
- The following paragraphs are extracted from Article 4 of the
- Framework Convention on Climate Change concerning
- commitments. They indicate the level of concessions
- granted to developing nations. The full text of the
- convention can be obtained from the Climate Change
- Secretariat, 16 Avenue Jean Trembley, 1209 Geneva,
- Switzerland.
-
- 7. The extent to which developing country Parties will
- effectively implement their commitments under the
- Convention will depend on the effective implementation by
- developed country Parties of their commitments under the
- Convention related to financial resources and transfer of
- technology and will take fully into account that economic
- and social development and poverty eradication are the
- first and overriding priorities of the developing country
- Parties.
-
- 8. In the implementation of the commitments in this Article,
- the Parties shall give full consideration to what actions are
- necessary under the Convention, including actions related
- to funding, insurance and the transfer of technology, to
- meet the specific needs and concerns of developing
- country Parties arising from the adverse effects of climate
- change and/or the impact of the implementation of
- response measures, especially on:
- a) Small island countries;
- (b) Countries with low-lying coastal areas;
- (c) Countries with arid and semi-arid areas, forested areas
- and areas liable to forest decay;
- (d) Countries with areas prone to natural disasters;
- (e) Countries with areas liable to drought and
- desertification; (f) Countries with areas of high urban
- atmospheric pollution; (g) Countries with areas with fragile
- ecosystems, including mountainous ecosystems;
- (h) Countries whose economies are highly dependent on
- income generated from the production, processing and
- export, and/or on consumption of fossil fuels and
- associated energy-intensive products; and
- (i) Land-locked and transit countries.
- Further, the Conference of the Parties may take actions, as
- appropriate, with respect to this paragraph.
-
- 9. The Parties shall take full account of the specific needs
- and special situations of the least developed countries in
- their actions with regard to funding and transfer of
- technology.
-
- 10. The Parties shall, in accordance with Article 10, take
- into consideration in the implementation of the
- commitments of the Convention the situation of Parties,
- particularly developing country Parties, with economies that
- are vulnerable to the adverse effects of the implementation
- of measures to respond to climate change. This applies
- notably to Parties with economies that are highly
- dependent on income generated from the production,
- processing and export, and/or consumption of fossil fuels
- and associated energy-intensive products and/or the use of
- fossil fuels for which such Parties have serious difficulties
- in switching to alternatives.
-
- ************************************************************
-
-
- ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT
-
- JEAN PHILIPPE THOMAS, YOUBA SOKONA and
- SOULEYMANE DIALLO discuss the dilemma facing African
- nations in attempting to reconcile the demand for increased
- energy and protection of the environment.
-
- IT IS generally agreed that action must be taken now to
- curb global climate change despite lack of conclusive
- scientific data regarding environmental impacts of pollution
- from human activities. The North and the South are
- confronted with a crisis of unknown proportion. Unless
- precautionary measures are taken, the problem may
- become insoluble or the costs unbearable.
-
- Posed like this, the problem of environment is limited to the
- direct effects of environmental pollution. For African
- countries, however, the problem is much broader, and a
- crucial aspect is the relationship between environment and
- development.
-
- Energy has played an important role in the growth and
- development of Northern nations. At the same time, energy
- from exploitation of natural resources to production and
- consumption is recognized as a major source of global
- environmental degradation.
-
- In African countries, low energy consumption is both
- cause and consequence of our development problems. It
- also contributes to environmental degradation (for example,
- deforestation). However, if we are to escape from our
- present condition of under-development and improve the
- living standards of our people, we will need strong energy
- growth in the next few decades. What then, of the
- environment?
-
- Equally, the struggle against poverty is closely linked to
- environmental degradation. If we are capable of mobilizing
- against the greenhouse effect, we must be capable, a
- fortiori, of mobilizing against poverty.
-
- It should not be surprising, then, that environmental
- problems are perceived differently in North and South, with
- their different economic and cultural sensitivities, even if
- both agree that these problems are inescapable.
-
- It is evident that the Southern contribution to global
- warming is small compared to that of the North. Common
- agreements to limit energy emissions can only be adopted
- if they do not constitute a constraint to development in the
- South. Thanks to their command of new technologies,
- Northern countries are able to adapt as new problems
- arise. This is not true for less developed countries. These
- often rely on out-moded production techniques (e.g.
- electricity) and, as consumers, they constitute no more
- than a dumping ground for Northern surpluses (household
- appliances) or second-hand goods (automobiles).
-
- As for energy, the current system of production and
- consumption is irrational. We certainly wonder at those who
- think that a world dominated by the production and
- consumption of new, high tech products and low energy
- consumption, is sustainable. Such a world would exclude,
- ipso facto, those countries who cannot afford such products
- until the market is saturated (i.e. when prices drop
- sufficiently in the course of the life cycles of products). In
- brief, less developed countries are once again relegated to
- adopt energy inefficient production technologies and
- consumer goods.
-
- Thus it becomes a matter of urgency to organize, as
- rapidly as possible, in-depth reflections on an authentic
- energy- environment future, including an analysis of
- choices regarding development and society, and of
- lifestyles and their implications for the environment. If one
- adds demographic considerations (50 per cent of the
- population is under 17 years of age in urban and certain
- rural areas), it is hard to see how countries that already
- have difficulties maintaining their industrial capacity will
- meet a quasi-exponential growth in demand. Demand is
- expected to grow even though high prices due to inefficient
- use of technology will limit many people's consumption.
-
- Only a serious reflection on alternative models, be it in
- transport, housing, lighting, etc., will lead to solutions that
- may already be available elsewhere. A two pronged study
- is needed.
-
- First, taking several examples of successful, systematic
- utilization of alternative energies as a base, we need to
- look at how these experiences can be extended to a whole
- region or country. We also need to ask what Northern
- countries could contribute to this extension?
-
- Secondly, to improve the efficiency of existing systems, we
- should look beyond national boundaries to see how we can
- integrate systems of large-scale hydroelectric and thermal
- stations at regional or sub-regional levels, as for example
- SADCC (South African Development Conference Council)
- or CEDEAO (Communaute Economique et Douaniere des
- Etats de l'Afrique de l'Ouest). We should also oppose
- isolated national strategies that consist of rehabilitating
- obsolete generating facilities and importing second-hand
- equipment for energy production and consumption.
-
- African countries should not mimic pseudo-linear Northern
- development models. Rather, we should be reflecting on an
- alternative development model based on the triad:
- energy-environment-development. It is our responsibility to
- find the political and social capacity to begin to think about
- these models. Only by engaging in this reflection will
- Southern countries be able to participate as equal partners
- in discussions about sharing global environmental
- constraints.
-
- If Southern countries refuse for various reasons good or
- bad to take action on the environment, reality and
- international economic pressure will soon make them
- change their minds. This may be another debate, but it
- cannot be ignored. In any case, the problem has to be
- posed in terms of development: Under what conditions, old
- or new, are Northern countries prepared to invest to enable
- the South to forego the obligatory passage through the
- phase of energy-growth correlation? Can we not
- collaborate so that this phase can be shortened compared
- to what happened in the North?
-
- To what extent is the international community prepared to
- regulate greenhouse gas emissions and other forms of
- pollution that cause global climate change? If annual
- pollution permits are issued, how will allocation be
- organized? Can we think of a system that, beyond this new
- right to pollute, would integrate pricing policies and other
- specific mechanisms that would orient production and
- consumption in African countries towards more efficient use
- of energy? Such mechanisms should be geared to
- reducing quantity of energy used for unit of output as well
- as improvement of environmental quality.
-
- In other words, how can we convert environmental
- constraints into positive factors of development?
-
- We cannot answer the questions posed above with specific
- studies on each issue; rather, we must undertake a
- participatory, prognostic process of research, education
- and action.
-
- That we respond by proposing a method instead of by
- making recommendations may seem surprising, but our
- experience at ENDA-TM (Environment Development Action
- in the Third World) has taught us that, in the end, it is the
- only way to raise public awareness about the problems we
- face so that people can generate their own solutions.
- Participation in this sense includes as well local
- communities in the definition of their energy needs, as
- policymakers in the elaboration of energy policy and
- development.
-
- To be realistic, our starting point is the simple, well-known
- fact that the energy problem in Africa is extremely critical.
- Although energy production exceeds use at the continental
- level, most countries have a serious energy deficit and vast
- regions of Africa depend entirely on human energy or are
- threatened with environmental destruction from overuse of
- biomass resources.
-
- To address the problem, we first identify quantitative and
- qualitative energy needs corresponding to the aspirations
- of urban and rural consumers. This requires a preliminary
- observation and quantification of consumer behaviour to
- ensure objectivity. Unfortunately, most existing
- governmental and international studies are based on
- partial, scattered, unverified data. By short-cutting this
- tedious work, they have advocated measures that, at best,
- have little chance of being implemented, and, at worst,
- have the opposite effect of what was intended. Examples
- of such cases are, alas, numerous. Solid energy demand
- surveys are thus essential.
-
- Secondly, we identify and programme energy supplies that
- may be used, in ideal circumstances, to satisfy demand.
- The supply side of the energy equation is usually the
- focal point of energy systems. Without underestimating the
- importance of supply, we subscribe to an approach that
- adapts supply to demand in quantity and quality. Energy
- planning, thus, is the result of a confrontation between
- supply and demand under multiple possible constraints,
- including environmental limits.
-
- Thirdly, we define, in concert with consumers and
- policymakers, the appropriate energy policies. Sensitizing
- as many policymakers as possible is the ultimate objective
- of our activities. This does not happen spontaneously. It is
- the result of contacts made in the course of data collection
- and seminars on energy-planning, which have created an
- active continental network for exchange of energy
- information and data.
-
- To conclude, the emergence of development alternatives in
- African countries will require a simultaneous strengthening
- of negotiating capacities in these countries. In the area of
- environment and development, the arguments put forward
- above will be more credible if they are defended with the
- double-edged sword of imagination and realism.
-
- Dr Souleymane Diallo and Dr Jean Philippe Thomas are
- both Senior Research Fellows in the ENDA Energy
- Programme. Dr Youba Sokona is Head of the ENDA
- Energy Programme. This article was originally published in
- the newsletter of the Climate Network Africa, Impact
- (March 1992).
-
- *************************************************************
-
- WHOSE COMMON FUTURE?
-
- Guidelines for the UN Environmental Conference is the title
- of a report published in January 1992 by the influential
- American think tank, The Heritage Foundation. Authored by
- Christopher Gacek and James Malone, the paper assessed
- the implications of the Earth Summit, a process which, they
- considered, could "affect profoundly America's economic
- growth, productivity and international competitiveness."
- SARAH GRANICH and MICK KELLY consider the attitudes
- and misconceptions which underpin this revealing
- assessment.
-
- The authors of the Heritage Foundation report set the tone
- for their assessment by warning that the Earth Summit will
- be an important test of whether the U.N. is ready to
- abandon the "ideologically doctrinaire positions which
- paralyzed it for nearly a quarter-century." They cite what
- they perceive as the twin dangers of environmental
- regulation based on faulty scientific analysis and Third
- World pressure for increased financing through the World
- Bank and other multilateral organizations.
-
- To assist American negotiators at the Earth Summit
- (UNCED), the study advanced six "environmentally sound,
- free market goals."
-
- Goal one advised negotiators to "limit discussions of global
- warming. UNCED has the potential for shaping world public
- opinion on environmental issues. It thus should restrict
- itself to those issues in which it has competence. On global
- warming... UNCED expertise and scientific objectivity will
- be very limited. UNCED should await the outcome of those
- negotiations that the U.N. is conducting specifically to
- address this very complicated matter."
-
- Goal two advised "Do not draft a detailed plan for reducing
- specific quantities of greenhouse gases by a set date.
- Scientific evidence on global warming needs to be more
- solid before costly regulations are imposed on the world's
- economy. The U.S. should urge the Intergovernmental
- Negotiating Committee to study global warming and
- examine objectively with sound scientific evidence whether
- there is global warming and whether it threatens the
- environment."
-
- What is particularly surprising about these two goals is that
- the authors appear totally unaware of, or else are
- deliberately misrepresenting, the process leading up to the
- agreement of a climate convention.
-
- In the first place, objective examination of the evidence on
- climate change is not the responsibility of the
- Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC). That body
- was created with the mandate of drafting a climate
- convention and associated protocols. Examination of the
- evidence is the responsibility of a separate body, the
- Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
-
- Secondly, the IPCC concluded back in 1990 that there was
- a clear consensus that climate change presented a serious
- threat and it was on this basis that the INC was formed to
- negotiate a climate convention to be signed at the Earth
- Summit as one of the major UNCED goals. Not only is the
- role of the INC and its relation to UNCED misrepresented
- but the fact that a scientific consensus already exists is
- ignored.
-
- Goal three advised "Do not address issues dealt with by
- other international bodies." As a general principle, this goal
- might be defensible but the authors have a specific matter
- in mind.
-
- Citing the danger of going beyond the 1989 Basel
- Convention on the transportation of hazardous wastes
- across international borders, they observe that " a
- transportation ban... would cripple the capability of many
- industries around the world that now destroy these wastes
- efficiently. [It] would require that hazardous chemicals be
- destroyed at their place of production rather than in a
- central location. Currently, such materials often are
- transported to distant reprocessing sites... If UNCED were
- to ban international shipment of hazardous wastes, new
- disposal facilities would have to be built, imposing new
- costs on national economies. Some production would no
- longer remain economically viable and would have to be
- stopped."
-
- Of course, what may be considered a distant site to an
- American may not be that distant to a Nigerian!
-
- Goal four advised "promote an understanding of
- biotechnology that realistically assesses its risks and
- benefits... The world must become more knowledgeable
- about biotechnology so that scientific research will not be
- impeded by unnecessary regulations. UNCED's New York
- and Rio sessions will be a good place for the US to begin
- this educational process... The American delegates should
- point out that the risks of biotechnology are exaggerated. "
-
- Goal five advised "protect private intellectual property
- rights... Some Third World countries want relaxed
- international rules allowing the appropriation of patented
- and copyrighted technologies. They claim that this will help
- them develop more environmentally safe ways to consume
- energy. These countries are using the environmental
- argument as a transparent rationale for appropriating
- intellectual property... To protect the research investments
- of American companies, the U.S. delegates should oppose
- strongly any UNCED agreement that undermines protection
- of patents, copyrights and other intellectual property
- rights... As the world leader in technology, America has an
- enormous stake in maintaining the integrity of intellectual
- property."
-
- Goal six advised "oppose UNCED proposals to spend
- more money on environmental problems in developing
- nations. Funds already set aside at institutions like the
- World Bank should be spent on projects that promote
- environmentally sound free market reforms... America has
- been generous in providing funds to help solve international
- environmental problems. Yet the assistance provided by
- the US and the other major economic powers cannot
- substitute for what developing countries can do themselves
- both to spur economic growth and clean the environment.
- Third World countries need to create enough wealth of their
- own to finance their own environmental programs."
-
- The study concludes with the assessment that "many Third
- World delegates will try to... turn UNCED into a forum for
- pressuring America and the industrial nations of the West
- to adopt costly and highly restrictive regulatory policies to
- protect the environment. They will also demand that the
- West pay for expensive environmental programs... The US
- delegation... should resist these pressures and the
- attempts to blame the West for the Third World's
- environmental problems. Instead of bureaucratic regulation
- of the world economy, the US should press UNCED to
- advocate free market solutions to environmental problems.
- Only these solutions can clean the environment without
- strangling the global economy."
-
- The authors warn that "UNCED could turn into a public
- relations frenzy intended to stampede Western countries
- into supporting extensive and costly programs calling for
- the rapid reduction of specific air emissions as the means
- to prevent global warming. To prevent this, the US
- delegation must remain firm."
-
- Further information: The Heritage Foundation, 214
- Massachusetts Avenue NE, Washington DC 20002, USA.
-
- ************************************************************
-
- THE POLITICS OF THE ENVIRONMENT
-
- The Earth Summit the United Nations Conference on
- Environment and Development (UNCED) held in Rio de
- Janeiro, Brazil, in June 1992 was intended to shape the
- international response to the myriad problems facing the
- world in the late 20th century. According to Maurice Strong,
- UNCED Secretary-General, "this process has been a
- profoundly human experience from which we cannot
- emerge unchanged. The world will not be the same,
- international diplomacy and the United Nations will not be
- the same and the prospects for the Earth's future cannot
- be the same."
-
- But, as Martin Khor of the Third World Network observed,
- "the euphoria of having participated in what is regarded as
- a historic conference that will change, if not save, the world
- is balanced by a nagging sense that not much in substance
- and political commitment for action has been achieved."
-
- This feeling was echoed by Gamani Corea, former
- Secretary-General of the United Nations Conference on
- Trade and Development, who wryly commented that "these
- days it is a great achievement to agree on what to say, not
- on what to do."
-
- One out of a number of contributing factors hindering the
- move from words to action was the attitude taken by the
- United States. TIEMPO discusses the US position with
- Alan Miller, Executive Director of the Center for Global
- Change at the University of Maryland.
-
- TIEMPO: The attitude of the Bush Administration at the
- Earth Summit angered and disappointed many people,
- making rather a mockery of claims of a new world order. It
- would appear that, whatever may have been thought of the
- issues themselves, the United States was very suspicious
- of the UNCED process, appearing reluctant to give any
- indication of support for its overall aims. Is this an accurate
- assessment?
-
- The influence of the upcoming US election on Bush
- Administration policies cannot be underestimated. While
- Bush promised to be the environmental President and did
- some good things early in his administration, he faced a
- serious challenge in the primary elections from the right
- wing, isolationist wing of the Republican Party. This is
- some of the same crowd that consistently bashes the
- United Nations and successfully brought about US refusal
- to sign the Law of the Sea Convention after 15 years of
- intense negotiations.
-
- Their influence was subsequently confirmed at the August
- Republican convention, where speakers repeatedly
- criticized the democratic candidate for vice-president,
- Senator Gore, as an environmental extremist . Another
- example is a recent interview with former White House
- Chief of Staff John Sununu, who said "The whole idea of
- the Rio conference was to corner the world leaders,
- particularly the president of the United States, in election
- year, and to force them to make a decision that, on a more
- rational basis, they might not make... this is how the
- conference was designed"
-
- In an effort to cater to different political constituencies,
- President Bush has also made inconsistent statements
- about environmental protection and economic growth. On
- the one hand, his speech at Rio emphasized that since the
- Stockholm Convention in 1972, the US economy grew by
- 57% but nevertheless achieved substantial reductions in
- pollution. Yet prior to Rio he also announced he would "not
- sign a treaty that in my view throws too many Americans
- out of work. I refuse to accept that kind of criticism from...
- the extremes in the environmental movement."
-
- One of the sad figures in this saga was William Reilly,
- Administrator of the US Environmental Protection Agency
- (EPA). His efforts to negotiate last-minute changes in the
- biological diversity treaty in order to obtain US approval
- failed when opponents arranged an embarrassing leak to
- the press. In a July memorandum to EPA employees,
- Reilly described his experience as "like a bungee jump.
- You dive into space secured by a line on your leg and trust
- it pulls you up before you smash to the ground. It doesn't
- typically occur to you that someone might cut your line!"
- One of the more astute observers of US behaviour at Rio
- may be Singapore Ambassador Tommy Koh. His
- conclusion was that one of the lasting lessons of the
- Summit may be never to hold a major international
- conference during an American election year.
-
- TIEMPO: What do you see as the main reasons for the
- reluctance to make a firm commitment on climate,
- particularly on emissions reduction?
-
- Politics and ideology have a great deal to do with it. Many
- American conservatives are irrevocably convinced that
- environmentalists are secret Luddites. Richard Darman has
- said that "Americans did not fight and win the wars of the
- 20th century to make the world safe for green vegetables."
- John Sununu, who had enormous influence until his
- resignation last December, has said that environmentalists
- are looking not so much for energy efficiency as they are to
- stop development.
-
- Last year one of the leading free market-oriented think
- tanks sponsored a conference featuring global warming
- sceptics. I called to ask the organizer about the reason for
- his decision to emphasize this perspective. The answer
- was revealing; it was, he said, in order to counteract the
- bias of left-wing groups pushing global warming solely as
- an excuse for advancing more government control of the
- economy. Lest this be treated as a bizarre exception, I
- hasten to add that I have subsequently heard and read this
- perspective from many others.
-
- The Administration's politics also reflect the influence of the
- fossil fuel industries, particularly the oil and coal producers.
- American business interests are divided on global warming;
- a coalition of efficiency, gas, and renewable energy
- companies even wrote to the President urging his
- participation at Rio and support for limits on greenhouse
- gases. Their views were obviously rejected.
-
- In contrast, assertions by US officials that the issue was
- simply an unwillingness to agree to goals without knowing
- how to reach them are totally unconvincing. Four years
- ago, the President promised 15 million new jobs without
- any serious idea of how such a goal could be
- accomplished (and in fact employment grew hardly at all).
- The President announced other heroic goals during his
- administration, including a commitment to make US
- students first in the world in science and mathematics by
- the year 2000.
-
- TIEMPO: It's ironic that most of the world's experts on
- global warming are based in the United States, yet the
- Administration acts as though its scientific advisors are
- ignorant of the current level of scientific understanding
- specifically, making far more of the remaining uncertainties
- than is warranted. Why is it that the scientific community in
- the United States has failed to get its point across? Do you
- consider that the stance of the Bush Administration has
- been influenced to any great extent by the greenhouse
- critics ? Or are they just adding noise to the debate?
-
- The Administration has used scientific uncertainty as a
- calculated weapon to undermine the case for action. There
- is no recognition that uncertainty cuts both ways and that,
- as the ozone depletion experience demonstrates, the
- problem may be worse as well as less than currently
- predicted. There is also a failure to distinguish between
- more information, which we will surely have every year,
- and better understanding, which cannot be predicted. We
- have spent billions on cancer research and know much
- more about its many forms, but we have not improved the
- life expectancy in every case.
-
- There are other factors at work. The size of the US
- scientific community arguably mitigates against the
- expression of strong consensus opinions. As most funding
- is in one way or another from public sources, scientists are
- rightly concerned that becoming outspoken may jeopardize
- their support. Jim Hansen, who first suggested that the
- temperature record substantiates a greenhouse warming in
- 1988 testimony before Congress, later had to resist a
- highly publicized effort to censor a subsequent
- Congressional appearance.
-
- The culture of science also naturally accepts scepticism
- (sometimes even when ill-founded) while questioning the
- motives of scientist-advocates. Dr Sherwood Rowland
- suffered enormous abuse for his public advocacy of
- restrictions on ozone depleting compounds. His character
- and research record were strong enough that he not only
- survived but received numerous scientific awards. Others
- are not as courageous.
-
- I would also argue that the US scientific community is
- relatively undivided in its opinions through the National
- Academy of Sciences, the IPCC, and other forums. As
- Jerry Mahlman of the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics
- Laboratory has said: "These findings about the greenhouse
- effect are extremely sound, but many groups don't want to
- hear the science. They only want their preconceived
- notions to be validated."
-
- TIEMPO: Much has been made of the economic cost of
- reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Do you think that this
- concern is warranted?
-
- There is a lot of bad science coming from economists but
- even more bad economics coming from scientists and
- politicians. There are countless studies by impeccable
- sources demonstrating that US emission reductions could
- be reduced 20% or more at low cost or even with savings.
- The ozone depletion experience also argues for this belief
- as alternatives were developed rapidly, and costs dropped,
- once a policy decision was made that CFCs would be
- phased out.
-
- There are a lot of vested interests in the fossil fuel
- industries and the government is willing to do studies for
- the purpose of showing that costs could be high. It takes
- no great genius to construct an economic model to show
- doing something differently than we are doing today will
- divert dollars from more constructive purposes resulting in
- damage to the economy. The interesting analysis is to look
- at how these costs could be reduced or eliminated, yet this
- approach is counter to the desired political result and is
- therefore simply ignored or dismissed.
-
- It also never ceases to amaze me that people unwilling to
- accept climate models will put such faith in economic
- models that cannot meet comparable burdens of proof.
-
- TIEMPO: With elections due later this year, do you see any
- prospect for change?
- The implications of the election are enormous. There is the
- possibility some would say probability that we will go from
- an environmental disaster to one of the strongest
- environmental administrations in American history. Certainly
- Al Gore has an unprecedented understanding of global
- environmental issues and international politics.
-
- Unfortunately, American politics have been so mired in the
- need to respond to conservative leaders that we may be ill-
- prepared to respond quickly and creatively to this
- opportunity. We should remember the experience of the
- Carter Administration, when a strong EPA was unable to
- overcome fossil fuel interests in the Department of Energy
- and the White House despite a sympathetic President. We
- also face new fiscal realities due to the US$3 trillion deficit.
-
- TIEMPO: It is, perhaps, unfair to judge a whole nation on
- the basis of its national politicians. Are attitudes different
- at the state, community and individual level?
-
- Some of the most innovative policy initiatives have come
- from state capitals and from industry. Several utility
- companies have already made commitments to reduce
- their carbon emissions. The state of Minnesota has been
- developing a policy to tax utilities enough to pay for tree
- planting offsets. Maryland adopted a sales tax on new cars
- that varies with energy efficiency. Several states have done
- assessments of how they might be affected by global
- warming and what they can do to mitigate the impacts. At
- the Center for Global Change we have a review of
- innovative policy from the states called Cool Tools that I
- will be glad to provide to your readers upon request.
-
- Further information: The Center for Global Change has
- kindly agreed to make copies of Cool Tools available free
- to southern subscribers to TIEMPO while supplies last. The
- address to write to is on page 25.
-
- ************************************************************
-
- CONFERENCES
-
- Role of Regional International Organizations in the Context
- of Global Warming
- Paris, France: 05-10-92 to 08-10-92
- Subtitled a NATO Advanced Research Workshop, the
- workshop is aimed at resource managers, social scientists
- and international law experts. With increasing interest in
- policy circles about the consequences of global warming,
- the intent is to assess regional policy options and the role
- of regional organizations under conditions of environmental
- change. Details: M H Glantz, ESIG, NCAR, PO Box 3000,
- Boulder, Colorado 80307, USA.
-
- Mountain Environments & Changing Climates
- Davos, Switzerland: 11-10-92 to 16-10-92
- Co-sponsored by WMO, the Swiss Meteorological Institute
- and the American Meteorological Society amongst others.
- Will include invited speakers, oral presentations and panel
- sessions intended to stimulate discussions. Conference will
- bring together climatologists, biologists, hydrologists and
- ecologists to discuss various aspects of mountain
- environments in changing climates. Details: Dr Martin
- Beniston, ProClim, National Institute for Climate and Global
- Change, PO Box 7613, CH-3001, Bern, Switzerland.
-
- Environmental Consciousness & the Mass Media
- Dresden, Germany: 14-10-92 to 17-10-92
- An international congress planned for scholars, scientists,
- media professionals and environmental activists to examine
- means through which environmental issues shape the
- public consciousness. Main themes to include mass media,
- North-South and East-West environmental dialogue, and
- identifying environmental problems in the public
- consciousness. Details: Patrick Wilkinson, Deutsches
- Hygiene-Museum, Lingnerplatz 1, DO 8010 Dresden,
- Germany.
-
- Biotic Feedbacks in the Global Climatic System
- Woods Hole, USA: 25-10-92 to 29-10-92
- International workshop organized by the Woods Hole
- Research Center as part of the IPCC review process
- contributing to the Second Assessment Report in 1995.
- Aim is to review prospects for incorporating biotic
- feedbacks into climatic prediction. Primary focus is on
- carbon dioxide and methane but other greenhouse gases
- will also be discussed. Details: Shelagh Varney, IPCC/WG1
- Secretariat, Hadley Centre, Meteorological Office, London
- Rd, Bracknell RG12 2SY, UK.
-
- Supercities: Environmental Quality and Sustainable
- Development
- San Francisco, USA: 26-10-92 to 30-10-92
- Will act as a forum on Supercities of the Pacific Rim as
- focal points of environmental conditions, quality of life, their
- use of natural resources and their impacts on sustainable
- development. Details: Noreen Dowling, Conference
- Coordinator, National Institute for Global Environmental
- Change, 1477 Drew Avenue, Suite 104, Davis, CA
- 95616-8756, USA.
- Applications and Prospects of Biotechnology for Arid and
- Semiarid Lands Lubbock, USA: 05-11-92 to 07-11-92
- An international conference intended to evaluate local,
- regional and international strategies for biotechnology
- developments for drought- adapted plants. Topics for
- discussion will include adaptations to arid environments,
- disease resistance of drought-adapted plants and
- alternative crops and desert medicinal plants. Details: Arid
- Lands Conference, RGK Foundation, 2815 San Gabriel,
- Austin TX 78705-3594, USA.
-
- Managing the Mediterranean
- Venice, Italy: 17-11-92 to 19-11-92
- A three-day workshop with the intent of providing
- information for decision making. Subjects for discussion will
- include the necessity for a cooperative system, such as a
- consortium of information centres and data banks that will
- link organizations, scientific and decision makers and
- monitoring and archive networks for the Mediterranean
- environment. Details: International Centre Cities on Water,
- San Marco 875-30124, Venice, Italy.
-
- Third Technical Conference on Meteorological Research in
- Eastern & Southern Africa
- Arusha, Tanzania: 30-11-92 to 04-12-92
- Conference will focus on research in the region to
- complement the activities of the Drought Monitoring
- Centres of the region. Papers are called for from regional
- scientists on such topics as climatology and data
- management, energy- related issues, climate change
- issues and remote sensing. It is intended that a
- proceedings volume will be produced. Details: W S M
- Minja, Directorate of Meteorology, PO Box 3056, Dar es
- Salaam, Tanzania.
-
- First International Conference of the African Meteorological
- Society on Recent Climate Anomalies
- Nairobi, Kenya: 07-12-92 to 11-12-92
- Conference intends to address current concerns on climate
- variability and climate change and their relationship to
- environmental degradation. Will also consider climatic
- impacts on all aspects of socio-economic activities such as
- agriculture, water resources and the rational use of energy.
- Details: Stephen Njoroge, Chairman, Local Organizing
- Committee, PO Box 30259, Nairobi, Kenya.
-
- Technical Conference on Tropical Urban Climates
- Dhaka, Bangladesh: 11-01-93 to 16-01-93
- Conference intends to focus attention on issues relating to
- the Tropical Urban Climate Experiment initiated by the
- WMO Commission for Climatology. Themes to be
- discussed include the impact of climate and weather on
- urban fabric, structures and operations; impact of urban
- activities on climate on local, regional and global scales;
- and application of climate information and knowledge in
- urban planning, building and operations. Details: Secretary-
- General, WMO, Case Postale 2300, CH-1211, Geneva 2,
- Switzerland.
-
- Convention on Biological Diversity:
- National Interests and Global Imperatives
- Nairobi, Kenya: 26-01-93 to 29-01-93
- International conference addressing topics such as national
- sovereignty, developments in international environmental
- law, access to biological diversity, technology transfer,
- research, training, education and public awareness. Details:
- Calestous Juma, ACTS, PO Box 45917, Nairobi, Kenya.
-
- XVII International Grassland Congress
- Palmerston North, New Zealand: 08-02-93 to 21-02-93
- Four climate change sessions will examine the likely impact
- on grassland ecosystems, prediction of effects on plants
- and their biotic environment, adaption of grassland to
- climate change, and the role of grassland agriculture in
- modifying climate change. Details: Bruce Campbell, DSIR
- Grasslands, Private Bag 11008, Palmerston North, New
- Zealand.
-
- Third Global Warming Science and Policy International
- Conference
- Chicago, USA: 05-04-93 to 08-04-93
- Main objective of the conference is to report on the impacts
- of UNCED, providing an international forum on the scientific
- and policy issues facing governments with regard to the
- greenhouse effect and similar transnational environmental
- problems. Details: Sinyan Shen, Natural Resource
- Management Division, SUPCON International, One
- Heritage Plaza, Woodbridge, IL 60517-0275, USA.
-
- International Conference on Science and Technology in
- Third World Development
- Glasgow, Scotland: 05-04-93 to 07-04-93
- Organized by the Third World Science, Technology and
- Development Forum (STD Forum), the conference will
- include participants from both developing and Western
- countries. Discussion topics will include technology and the
- environment, technology transfer and international
- organizations and new sciences and technologies. Details:
- Richard Heeks, Programme Secretary, STD '93, Institute
- for Development Policy and Management, University of
- Manchester, Precinct Centre, Manchester M13 9QS, UK.
-
-
- Climate Change, Natural Disasters & Agricultural Strategies
- Beijing, P R China: 26-05-93 to 29-05-93
- An international symposium intended to review the studies
- of climate change impacts on agriculture, forests, sea level
- rise, land use and other human environmental factors.
- Aims include exchange of ideas, views and techniques
- about how best to forecast and mitigate these disasters
- and to promote international cooperation in environmental
- protection. Details: Professor Lu Guangming, Beijing
- Agricultural University, 100094 Beijing, P R China.
-
- ************************************************************
-
- SEA LEVEL RISE ON CHINA'S COASTAL PLAINS
-
- HAN MUKANG discusses some of the critical problems in
- the current state of research concerning sea level rise in
- China.
-
- TWO ASPECTS of the impact of global warming will
- particularly affect China's coastal environment, according to
- current research. First, accelerated sea level rise will
- inundate a vast coastal area causing both saltwater
- intrusion and coastal erosion. Second, any intensification of
- typhoon activity, which may be coupled with a migration of
- typhoon tracks in a northward direction, will have serious
- consequences.
-
- Accelerated sea level rise has been clearly found along the
- coast of China. Based on data from a number of tidal
- stations in different geologic and tectonic settings, the State
- Oceanological Bureau of China announced in March 1989
- that the sea level along China's coast had risen 11.5cm in
- the past 100 years, averaging 2.3mm a year in recent
- decades (1950-1980).
-
- The rise was found to be greater along the low-lying
- coastal plains. For example, sea level rose at an average
- of 3mm a year in the years from 1954 to 1978 along the
- Pearl River delta plain and almost 6mm a year between the
- years 1962 to 1981 along the North China plain near
- Tianjin. Faster sea level rise can also be observed along
- the East China coastal plain near Shanghai.
- The localized acceleration in sea level rise along these
- plains is due to both tectonic subsidence and excessive
- groundwater extraction. For example, land settlement
- caused by groundwater extraction has exceeded 2m in the
- downtown areas of Tianjin and Shanghai over the past
- thirty years.
-
- There are still questions to be resolved concerning past
- rates of sea level rise. Different authors have presented
- varying estimates even based on the same data. The
- reasons for these discrepancies include: different methods
- of calculation; estimation based on different numbers of
- tidal stations and periods of data; insufficient consideration
- of local and complex factors such as land subsidence
- caused by tectonic movements and groundwater
- overpumping.
-
- There is also debate over the evidence of past changes in
- typhoon activity. It has been reported that there has been a
- northward shift in typhoon landing sites since the 1970s
- and that the possible cause of this shift is global warming.
- However, analysis by the author of data for the period
- 1939-90 has not confirmed this conclusion.
-
- Accurate predictions of the future rate of sea level rise
- along the coastline of China, taking into account all factors
- including local geological and tectonic conditions, are not
- yet available. At present, the best way to research the
- impact of sea level rise in coastal areas is to presume a
- one metre rise without a given timescale. This suggestion
- is supported by the IPCC's projected one metre global sea
- level rise over the next century. But the most realistic
- problem to which greater attention must be paid is that a
- one metre rise would be reached much earlier along
- coastal areas suffering from intense tectonic subsidence
- and/or groundwater overpumping.
-
- A one metre rise in sea level would present a serious
- threat to China's coastal regions in both physical and
- socio-economic terms. Many of China's most important
- cities have coastal sites and almost 55% of the nation's
- gross national production comes from coastal areas. The
- coastal low-lying plains make up one-fifth of China's coastal
- area, with some of the largest cities (such as Shanghai,
- Guangzhou and Tianjin) located at either the level of high
- tide or even lower. Every year, typhoon-driven surges
- cause additional flooding, sometimes by as much as a 1.5
- to 3m rise, intensifying further the threat of sea level rise.
- The situation is aggravated by groundwater overpumping
- and land subsidence.
-
- The protective measures necessary to deal with sea-water
- flooding can be observed in the downtown area of
- Shanghai. Over the past forty years, the doorways of many
- old buildings have been equipped with special vertically
- movable or laterally sliced gates. The street windows of
- basements have been blocked up and the anti-flooding
- walls along the river banks and coastline have been raised
- two to three times. The Guangzhou downtown area with
- the city's busiest commercial streets is sited along the
- banks of the Pearl River. Over the past twenty years, this
- part of the city has frequently become inundated due to
- high tides, river flooding or typhoon-driven surges.
-
- If the projected one metre sea level rise is reached and the
- coastal area is not protected, serious consequences would
- ensue.
-
- First, a vast area, much larger than expected, would be
- inundated. The areas located lower than the four to five
- metre contour line (depending on the height of maximum
- high tide and storm surge level) in China's four largest and
- richest low-lying plains would be entirely drowned.
-
- The areas at risk include the whole of the Pearl River
- deltaic plain with Guangzhou, the eastern half of the East
- China coastal plain with Shanghai, the eastern half of the
- North China coastal plain with Tianjin, and the southern
- half of the Lower Liaohe River plain with Yingkou.
-
- The area of these four coastal plains which would be
- inundated amounts to around 92,000 sq km. This is an
- area larger than that of Austria (83,849 sq km) or two
- Netherlands in total (2 x 40,884 sq km). The population
- that would be affected is around 67.05 million, more than
- the whole of France (54.62 million in 1985) or the United
- Kingdom (56.13 million in 1985).
-
- If one also takes into account the varying widths of the
- coastal zone and the patches of small delta that would be
- flooded in the mountainous regions, the total area
- vulnerable to inundation could be greater than 125,000 sq
- km and the total population affected could be more than 73
- million.
-
- Second, the severe saltwater intrusion already manifest on
- the North China coastline near the city of Canzhou 190km
- west of the present Bohai Sea shoreline and in the coastal
- area of Laizhou Bay would be exacerbated.
- Finally, coastal erosion would become even worse. There
- is already a severe problem due to a lack of sediment
- caused by the damming of rivers, the setting of tidal gates
- at river mouths without frequent opening, and the mining of
- beach sands. The famous Baidaihe Coastal Resort Zone
- near the eastern terminal of the Great Wall on the west
- coast of the Hohai Sea, which includes valued bathing
- beaches, would be entirely swept away.
-
- It is clear that the only realistic and appropriate
- counter-measure to sea level rise on these plains is to
- raise and consolidate the existing dykes which have been
- built in an almost continuous span along the whole coast,
- to build auxiliary constructions (such as pumping facilities)
- and to undertake an integrated, comprehensive re-planning
- of coastal cities and regions.
-
- One problem, though, arises. To build dykes and related
- facilities over a long distance to protect against sea level
- rise requires large funds. These worries have been
- highlighted at IPCC international and regional meetings.
- Discussions have focused on how such large expenses
- would affect the economic development of a region or a
- nation, and whether these expenses could be sustained
- within a local or regional financial capacity.
-
- Chinese practice has provided a favourable answer. With
- its own finances, an oil field administration on the Yellow
- River delta recently built a large dyke at the Yellow River
- mouth for the safety of the oil field. This dyke is designed
- to protect against a one hundred year storm surge. It is
- rubble concrete, built on the muddy flat at 1m altitude, and
- is 108km long, 5m high with a bottom width of 38m and a
- top width of 10m used as a highway. The dyke cost a total
- of 400 million Chinese Yuan (about US$74 million). This is
- equivalent to only about four-fifths of the annual output
- value of one of the refineries in this particular oil field. The
- unit cost of such a dyke is 4 million Chinese Yuan
- (US$0.74 million) per kilometre.
-
- Another active example is provided by a large state-run
- alkaline chemical enterprise on the Laizhou Bay coastal
- plain south of the Bohai Sea, which has recently completed
- a gigantic dyke of 204km length along the entire bay
- coastline at its own expense.
-
- The construction of high dykes along the coastline does
- present environmental management with another problem
- though. How to effectively treat the large area of low-lying
- land located behind the dykes which suffers from
- salinization and frequent water logging? This problem has
- been more or less solved by Chinese practice in the lower
- reaches and deltaic area of the Yellow River.
- The Yellow River possesses a high concentration of
- sediments and its channels are constrained by dykes
- located 4-8m higher than the land behind the dykes. The
- local people have diverted the water with the rich
- sediments from the Yellow River into the low-lying area
- through the use of sluices and additional canals. The fertile
- sediments settle and the height of the area is raised by one
- to two metres through several such diversions in two to
- four years. After every diversion, the local people can
- cultivate this fertile land and obtain good harvests without
- the need for irrigation or fertilization.
-
- While effective, it must be recognized that these practices
- are the result of local enterprises and communities dealing
- with their own immediate problems. Despite the warnings
- of scientists concerning the need for appropriate response
- strategies to deal with future sea level rise, an
- overwhelming majority of local government decision
- makers, urban planners and environmental officers are still
- not aware of the need to consider potential impacts and to
- devise response strategies.
-
- Professor Han Mukang is with the Department of
- Geography at Peking University. This article has been
- extracted by the Tiempo editorial team from the paper
- "Impact of Global Warming on China's Coastal
- Environment", presented at the International Seminar on
- Climate Change Impacts, Beijing, August 31st to
- September 1st 1991. Professor Han Mukang is co-author
- of two relevant papers to be published in the Journal for
- Coastal Research, December 1992: "The Adverse Impact
- of a Projected One Metre Sea Level Rise on China's
- Coastal Environment and Cities: A National Assessment"
- and "The Adverse Impact of a Projected One Metre Sea
- Level Rise on the North China Coastal Plain: A Case
- Study". His research is part of an international project
- sponsored by the Center for Global Change, Maryland,
- USA.
-
- ************************************************************
-
- A WEATHER EYE ON.....
-
- Weather Eye this issue presents a selection of comments
- and views that were heard at or about the United Nations
- Conference on Environment and Development in Rio.
-
- STRONG WORDS...
- We have yet to see the degree of commitment from
- governments to the principles of the Earth Summit, but the
- UNCED Secretary-General, Maurice Strong, was optimistic
- on the eve of the conference. He declared that, to ensure
- global security, a cost-effective investment would be to help
- the developing world revitalize their economies and combat
- poverty which he described as not only morally repugnant
- but destructive to the environment. Realistically, he said, he
- did not expect the commitment of governments to come all
- at once. The final test would be the extent to which
- governments actually carried out the commitments.
-
- BIRDS OF A FEATHER...
- Prevention is the best solution to the global warming threat,
- but politically it will not happen, concluded Michael Glantz
- of the Environmental and Societal Impacts Group in
- Boulder, USA. He described his view of political reactions
- in terms of:
- o ostriches: political leaders who, like this bird, bury their
- head in the sand. They do not care about global warming
- or its effects. President Bush is the greatest ostrich who
- will be at UNCED;
- o hawks: global warming is happening now and they
- point to ecological catastrophe as proof; and
- o doves: they are sceptical, nothing will happen that
- nature can't absorb.
-
- YOUR TREE OR MINE?...
- The issue of sovereignty came to the fore in the debate on
- forest protection. Kamal Nath, India's environment minister,
- stated the position of many Third World nations: "We
- oppose a convention on forests. We will not discuss
- international scrutiny of our forests... Trying to globalize
- forests is like saying that oil is a global resource. You can't
- tell us what to do with our forests so you can run your cars
- in Los Angeles."
-
- But the pithiest comments came from Malaysia. Jing Wen
- Lian, spokeswoman on forests, was adamant: "Our forests
- are not global commons they are national resources. I don't
- say that North Sea oil or Alaskan gold should belong to the
- global community. Why do you claim our forests?... Oceans
- play a far more important role as sinks for carbon dioxide,
- but nobody talks about protecting the marine ecosystem.
- And what about temperate and boreal forests?... By no
- stretch of the imagination are we going to keep our forests
- in custody for some other nation."
-
- Obviously, concluded Prime Minister Mahathir bin
- Mohammed, "the North wants to have a direct say in the
- management of forests in the poor South at next to no cost
- to themselves."
-
- A RELUCTANT PARTICIPANT...
- The United States came in for much criticism over its
- attitude at the Earth Summit. Forced into the defence even
- before the conference began, President Bush made his
- position clear. "No other nation has done more more
- rapidly to clean up the water, the air, or preserve public
- lands. No other nation has done more to advance the state
- of technology that promises cleaner growth. No other
- nation has put in place stricter standards to curb pollution
- in the future... But let me say up front: I am determined to
- protect the environment. I am also determined to protect
- the American taxpayer. The day of the open chequebook is
- over... environmental protection and a growing economy
- are inseparable... For the past half century, the US has
- been the great engine of global economic growth, and it's
- going to stay that way. Every American knows what that
- means for us... What many may not know is that the world
- also has a stake in a strong American economy... Right
- now, one half of the developing countries' exports of
- manufactured goods to all industrialized countries are sold
- in the United States."
-
- Later, he added in less coherent fashion: "I have nothing
- to be apologetic for. I also have to be the one at this
- conference that is responsible for jobs and people being at
- work."
-
- Stressing that the United States would lead in protecting
- the world's forests so that biodiversity can be maintained
- he said, "We think that a good forestry programme will
- take care of a lot of the... biodiversity needs. And so
- though I will not sign that treaty as it sits on the table now,
- we will continue to be the leader, or a leader, in terms of
- forests and in terms of environmental technology."
-
- But change may be in the air. Al Gore, US
- Vice-Presidential candidate, commented that "it's like a
- Greek tragedy. Everyone can see it coming. The only thing
- left is for him to invite the executives of a few coal
- companies to come along with him."
-
- At least, after much prevarication, Bush did attend the
- Earth Summit for 24 hours. Others were so disgusted at
- the likely lack of progress that they didn't go at all.
- Environment Commissioner for the European Community,
- Carlo Ripa di Meana, pulled out, explaining that the Earth
- Summit has been betrayed before it has begun. Known as
- the Grim Reaper because of his hard line on
- environmental regulation, he resigned from his position
- shortly afterwards.
-
- FINALLY...
- The Global Environment Facility (GEF) was the subject of
- much controversy. Malaysian delegate, Renji Sathiah,
- expressed the widely-held view that the Facility was forced
- down our throats as a source of funding for the
- implementation of the climate convention.
-
- And there was much discussion of the forthcoming
- restructuring of the fund. Dutch Development Cooperation
- Minister, Jan Van Pronk, argued that it should be
- restructured to guarantee that the donor countries could
- not impose their views.
-
- Criticizing the attitude of many northern donors towards aid
- and assistance, Van Pronk observed that capitalism "... is
- not the system, not the sole system, it is not even the only
- possibility to speed up economic development... We need a
- paradigm that is not capital-oriented but man- and
- nature-oriented, and which is much less material
- consumerism-oriented."
-
- ************************************************************
-
- CONFRONTING CLIMATE CHANGE
-
- A JOINT SEMINAR, Global Issues in Energy and Climate
- Change, was organized at the Global Forum in Rio de
- Janeiro on June 5th by the Stockholm Environment
- Institute (SEI) and the Tata Energy Research Institute
- (TERI).
-
- The aim of the seminar was to provide an opportunity to
- discuss and consider energy use in the context of
- sustainable development, how climate change should be
- confronted and on what issues the climate convention and
- associated protocols should be framed and judged.
-
- The discussion was wide-ranging, covering energy and
- sustainable development, responses to climate change,
- technology, economics, equity, alternative strategies,
- political issues and targets and timetables.
-
- The participants issued the following statement at the end
- of the seminar: "Despite decades of intense debate,
- present trends in energy supply and use in industrialized
- and developing countries will lead to significant increases in
- emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases.
- Against this background, discussions stressed that it was
- essential that a clear and unambiguous climate convention
- confronts the issue by setting out a clear schedule for
- limitation targets that share the burden of reductions in an
- equitable way. Development aspirations of the poorer
- countries cannot be ignored; the developing countries must
- not be saddled with unrealistic expectations for action
- related to the climate convention. For any real progress to
- be made, resource transfers to the less well-endowed
- countries will be essential and should be clearly committed
- in the convention. Also, efforts and resources must focus
- on local capacity building by strengthening
- energy/environment institutions in the developing
- countries."
-
- "High and wasteful resource consumption cannot be
- sanctioned in the context of a climate convention: energy
- saving, natural resource protection, and economic
- measures to ensure resource use efficiency and reduction
- of resource use intensity are available and could be
- implemented in all countries. This will require international
- will and national commitment and would release resources
- for effective development. Agreements for the stabilization
- and reductions of greenhouse gases need a well-tested,
- independent monitoring system in place to chart progress.
- A framework for such a monitoring procedure exists and
- should be refined and established as part of the activities
- accompanying a convention."
-
- SEI launched two new books at the seminar: Confronting
- Climate Change and World Energy: Building a Sustainable
- Future. TERI released a special Earth Summit issue of
- their journal Pacific and Asian Journal of Energy.
- Further information: For details of the publications
- mentioned above, write to the addresses given on page 25.
-
- ************************************************************
-
- CONTACT ADDRESSES
-
- iMPACT, Climate Network Africa, PO Box 21136, Nairobi,
- Kenya.
- Dr A Miller, Center for Global Change, University of
- Maryland at College Park, Suite 401, 7100 Baltimore
- Avenue, College Park, MD 20740, USA.
- Professor Han Mukang, Department of Geography, Peking
- University, Beijing, P R China
- Stockholm Environment Institute, Jarntorget 84, Box 2142,
- S-103 14 Stockholm, Sweden.
- Tata Energy Research Institute, 7 Jor Bagh, New Delhi 110
- 003, India.
- Drs J P Thomas, Y Sokona and S Diallo, Energy
- Programme ENDA, 54 rue Carnot, BP 3370, Dakar,
- Senegal.
-
- ************************************************************
-
- TIEMPO RESOURCE SERVICE
-
- The Tiempo Resource Service supplements the material
- published in each issue of the bulletin. Southern
- subscribers can obtain the following resources at no charge
- by writing to the address below. Northern subscribers can
- obtain copies by sending a donation to cover costs.
- o A listing of newsletters on global warming and the
- Third World (ref. 1/1).
- o A listing of key references on the global temperature
- record (ref. 1/2).
- o A listing of references covering assessment of the
- allocation of responsibility (ref. 1/3).
- o A listing of key references on sea level rise and small
- islands (ref. 2/1).
- o A transcript of the speech given by Prime Minister
- Paeniu of Tuvalu in London, 19th March 1991 (ref. 2/2).
- o A report on the International Conference on Impacts of
- Climate Change and Sea Level Rise, Hanoi, Vietnam,
- 9-10th November 1991 (ref. 3/1).
- o A listing of key references on energy and climate (ref.
- 3/2).
- o A listing of the latest IPCC global temperature record
- (ref. 4/1).
- o The full text of the AOSIS proposal for a Sea Level
- Rise Insurance Pool (ref. 4/2).
- o A reprint of the full text of the article, The Case Against
- Climate Aid, from the Ecologist (ref (5/1).
- o A listing of references on water harvesting and
- irrigation (ref 5/2).
- o A listing of references on volcanoes and climate (ref
- 6/1).
- o The Center for Global Change has kindly agreed to
- make Cool Tools available free to southern subscribers to
- Tiempo while supplies last. See adjacent box for address.
-
- Further information: To receive these resources, write to
- Sarah Granich, TIEMPO, 47 Wellington Rd, Norwich NR2
- 3HT, United Kingdom.
-
- ************************************************************
-
- LATEST ON THE ERUPTION OF PINATUBO
-
- GLOBAL COOLING of at least 0.5 C is now being
- predicted as a result of the June 1991 eruption of Mount
- Pinatubo in the Philippines. The latest analyses suggest
- that greenhouse warming may be offset for a couple of
- years while the atmosphere clears.
-
- According to Pat McCormick of the NASA Langley
- Research Center, Pinatubo injected as much dust and gas
- into the atmosphere as the famed eruption of Krakatoa in
- 1883. Pollution levels in the upper atmosphere, the
- stratosphere, have increased by 60 to 80 times. The result
- has been a warming of the stratosphere by between 3 and
- 3.5 C.
-
- Acid droplets created by the eruption absorb radiation
- entering the atmosphere from the Sun, warming the high
- atmosphere where the pollution may persist for some
- years. The Earth's surface cools as the volcanic aerosols
- scatter sunlight away from the ground.
-
- Jim Hansen and colleagues at the NASA Goddard Space
- Flight Center have used their climate model to predict the
- impact on global surface air temperature.
-
- Forecasting a maximum cooling of about 0.5 C with effects
- lasting for up to three years, the modellers conclude that
- Pinatubo "may... delay by several years the time at which
- global warming becomes obvious."
-
- It has been suggested that the eruption may provide an
- effective test of the models used to predict global warming.
- Cooling has been observed since the eruption but it could
- prove difficult to separate out the effects of Pinatubo from
- the many other causes of natural climate variability.
-
- END END END END END END END END END END END
-
-
- ******************************************************************
- Lelani Arris * Project Director
- EcoNet: larris * EcoNet Energy & Climate
- Internet/Fidonet: larris@igc.apc.org * Information Exchange
- BITNET: larris%igc.org@stanford * Box 1061
- Telephone: 403-852-4057 * Jasper, Alberta T0E 1E0
- Fax: 403-852-5173 * Canada
- ******************************************************************
-