Editorial: 1.5°C to stay alive

Some of the destruction caused by Cyclone Pam on the east coast of Efate Island in Vanuatu. Photo: UN Women Asia & the Pacific/flickr.com/CC BY-NC-ND

Greenhouse gas emissions must be reduced drastically to avoid dangerous climate change due to rising global temperature and to fulfil the objective of the 1992 UN Climate Convention. Dangerous climate changes occur, for example, when coastlines and island states disappear due to sea-level rise, global ecosystems such as coral reefs, arctic and high mountain ecosystems become extinct, or ocean acidification due to CO2 uptake reaches a tipping point at 1.5°C of global temperature rise. In hearings held by the EU

Commission, scientists from the Potsdam Climate Institute said that only 10 per cent of the world’s coral reefs would survive a global temperature increase of 1.5°C.

At the Geneva UN Climate Negotiations in February 2015, scientists made it very clear that even with the present temperature increase of 0.8°C, climate change effects are real and that each further 0.1° increase will cause serious climate change. A WHO representative said in Geneva that  a 1.5°C level of warming is projected to lead to very large increases in health risks in comparison with the current levels of risk. In Geneva the 46 countries that make up the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS) once again called for a UN target of “well below 1.5 degrees”. The 1.5 target is supported by more than 100 countries in the UN. In Geneva, AOSIS demanded a 70–95 per cent global reduction in greenhouse gases by 2050 and negative emissions after 2080, based on findings from the IPCC 5th Assessment Report from 2014. To achieve this target, the Climate Action Network, comprising more than 900 NGOs worldwide, is currently running a campaign to get agreement in the UN on a global target for 100 per cent renewable energy by 2050.

At current levels of carbon dioxide emissions, so much CO2 will be emitted over the next two decades that temperatures will rise more than 1.5 degrees. This is the reason AOSIS is calling for measures that would remove CO2 from the atmosphere later this century.

The key measures are protection of the world’s forests, drastically increasing the world’s forest cover and developing sustainable agriculture and forestry methods that act as a CO2 sink.

Fossil fuel use will have to be phased out in the next few decades worldwide. Carbon capture and storage technology, promoted by the fossil fuel industry, is still not a viable solution despite years of research and also faces strong opposition from citizens. AirClim has published several studies on CCS development, including articles in this issue.

AirClim is demanding that greenhouse gas emissions must be reduced globally by more than 95 per cent by 2050, and in the European Union by 2030. AirClim calls on European governments to stop building new coal power plants from this year onwards. This is in line with statements from the International Energy Agency, which in 2013 demanded that by 2017 no new coal power stations should be built if the world wants to limit global temperature rise to 2 degrees, as agreed by the UN. AirClim also demands that all old coal power plants in Europe must be closed by 2030. AirClim will co-publish a documentary and campaign film in spring called “1.5 to stay alive” to underpin the above targets.

Reinhold Pape

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Editorial: 1.5°C to stay alive

Greenhouse gas emissions must be reduced drastically to avoid dangerous climate change due to rising global temperature and to fulfil the objective of the 1992 UN Climate Convention.

Flexibilities threaten emission cuts from MCPs

Member states want to water down proposed new emission standards for medium-sized combustion plants, and there is now a risk that the European Parliament will push for even more exemptions.

Falling costs for renewable energy

A report from the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) highlights the plummeting costs for renewable energy – making renewable energy more competitive then ever.

EU industrial air pollution cost up to €189 billion per year

The cost of damage caused by pollutant emissions into the air from the largest 14,000 industrial facilities in 2012 has been estimated as at least €59-189 billion, and half of the total cost was caused by just one per cent of the industrial plants.

German experts: Nitrogen cuts urgently needed

Excessive emissions of nitrogen compounds into the environment pose a threat to human health, waterways, biodiversity, and the climate.

Norwegian CCS ambitions might move to the EU

Norway wants an agreement with the EU on collective delivery of a common climate target. This could make it easier to finance a full-scale CCS plant in one of the EU member states.

Modest growth of renewables in EU area

An EEA report shows modest growth in renewable energy consumption with a dominance by PV and wind in 2013. Another study claims that the integration of around 60 per cent ..

Enforcement of ship sulphur standards

Member states must carry out inspections on at least one-tenth of the ships calling each year, and test the fuel on at least 20–40 per cent of the inspected ships.

Launch of Energy Union – mixed messages

The Commission proposes a range of policy and legislative packages to realise the Energy Union in the next five years. Environmental organisations are critical of mixed messages, inconsistencies and continued reliance on fossil fuels.

Bad air quality prevails

More than nine out of ten urban citizens in the EU are exposed to harmful levels of the air pollutants PM2.5 and ozone.

Carbon storage a dead-end

CCS could make sense for industrial emissions. Or, then again, maybe not.

East German lignite at a crossroads

Lignite power in eastern Germany is disastrous for the climate and displaces more people than any other industry in Europe. Despite a target of 80 per cent renewable energy by 2050, phase-out plans are conspicuous by their absence.

 

Achieving NEC targets will cost less

Achieving the Commission’s health protection target for 2030 will be a third cheaper than previously estimated, according to new data.

Sweden: High health costs of bad air quality

Every year over 5,000 people in Sweden die prematurely due to air pollution, and the annual cost to society of health damage due to nitrogen oxides and particulate matter is estimated at SEK 42 billion.

Air pollution prevails in Germany

In 2014, levels of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) exceeded the EU air quality limit value at about half of the monitoring stations on busy roads, according to preliminary evaluations by the German Federal Environment Agency ..

US penalty policy for sulphur violations

On 16 January 2015, the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released a penalty policy for violations of the sulphur emissions limit for ships operating in the North American ..

ECA compliance much cheaper than expected

As a result of the big fall in oil prices in the second half of 2014, compliance with the sulphur emission control area (ECA) regulation is less costly than originally expected.

Poland must reduce PM10 levels

According to the Commission, the latest figures from Poland show that the maximum daily limit for fine dust particles (PM10) – that should have been achieved since 2005 – is being exceeded in 36 zones ..

Cleaner air would bring benefits in Turkey, Bulgaria, Serbia and Montenegro

In a series of briefing papers, the Health and Environment Alliance (HEAL) highlights the heavy toll on health resulting from exposure to poor air quality in Turkey, Bulgaria, Serbia and Montenegro.

Emission standards for wood heaters in the US

The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has issued updated air pollutant emission standards for woodstoves and set the first-ever federal standards for hydronic heaters, wood-fired forced air furnaces and pellet stoves.

Existing sources ignored in US methane proposal

On 14 January the Obama Administration announced a new goal to cut methane emissions from the oil and gas sector by 40–45 per cent from 2012 levels by 2025. The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) ..

Commission tells Austria, Germany, Slovakia and Bulgaria to act on air quality

In Austria, PM10 levels are too high in the zone of Graz, and in Germany in the zones of Stuttgart and Leipzig. In Slovakia, six zones exceed the daily limit value for PM10 ..