Keeping Climate Change to a Two Degree World: An Interview with Sir Robert Tony Watson

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Asquith, C. (2015). Keeping Climate Change to a Two Degree World: An Interview with Sir Robert Tony Watson. Solutions 6(1): 17-20. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/article/keeping-climate-change-to-a-two-degree-world-an-interview-with-sir-robert-tony-watson/

Idea Lab Interview

Keeping Climate Change to a Two Degree World:  An Interview with Sir Robert Tony Watson Interviewed by Christina Asquith

S

ir Robert Tony Watson is a British chemist who has been described by The New York Times as “an outspoken advocate of the idea that human actions— mainly burning coal and oil—are contributing to global warming and must be changed to avert environmental upheavals.” He has chaired, co-chaired or directed national and international scientific, technical, and economic assessments of stratospheric ozone depletion, biodiversity and ecosystems, climate change, and agricultural science and technology, including the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

You were the chair of the IPCC. What is your prognosis for the links between climate change science and policy going forward? I haven’t been involved since the Third Assessment Report. The link between science and policy is a strong one in that most governments do look to see what the latest scientific knowledge is, and IPCC provides that knowledge, whether understanding how humans are acting is affecting the climate, the limitation on ecological systems, food, water, and human health, and how can we transition to a low-carbon economy and the economic implications. So no doubt, government and private sector do have roles in providing the most important understanding. However there’s also a political debate—there’s a lot of politics here and issues around equity. For example, what is a fair distribution of emissions rights and to what degree should

Steve Rhodes

Sir Robert Tony Watson speaks at the 2012 fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union.

China, as the single largest emitter of gases, have obligations compared to the USA and Europe? And what are the obligations of smaller countries? Clearly there is the issue also of financing and then there’s the sticking point of whether the developing world should pay for this effort, and who should pay for the impact of climate change given that the industrialized world is causing the problem. IPCC is a solid foundation for this complex political debate. What do you think of President Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping’s bilateral climate agreement, announced at the Group of 20 Summit recently? How will it affect the negotiations leading up to Paris?

It’s an important step, but unfortunately still inadequate. If you look at the US commitment—a 25 percent reduction, relative to 2005—that’s only a 12 to 14 percent reduction in relation to 1990 by 2025. That’s not adequate to putting us on a pathway to a two degree world. The Chinese commitment is a major first step. For a country like China to say we have a commitment is good, but how much will those emissions grow between now and 2030, when they peak? So when I look at the commitments, I don’t believe it’s consistent. It’s putting the world on a two degree path. So I applaud it; but they could both go much further. So then the question is: will it encourage other counties who are large emitters in an absolute sense,

www.thesolutionsjournal.org  |  January-February 2015  |  Solutions  |  17


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