Newsletter ~ December 2018

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MONTHLY NEWSLETTER DECEMBER 2018

Woods Hole Research Center Paris agreement moves forward, but still not on track Dr. Philip B. Duffy President & Executive Director Negotiators at the United Nations climate meeting in Katowice, Poland, reached agreement last week on the “Paris Rulebook,” provisions for implementing the Paris climate agreement. The specifics of this are mind-numbingly tedious, but even so very important. The Rulebook includes provisions for how emissions reductions may be accomplished, for measuring and reporting greenhouse gas emissions, and for financing mitigation and adaptation measures in the developing world. The Rulebook should provide enough specificity and transparency to increase confidence that countries are living up to their commitments (if indeed they are). Russia, for example, has never ratified the agreement, supposedly because of a lack of transparency in measuring and reporting emissions. The rulebook should satisfy that concern, if that is truly Russia’s worry. The most important benefit of greater rigor and transparency should be increased willingness by countries to undertake more ambitious emissionsreductions commitments in 2020. We desperately need those, and we need countries to do better at meeting the commitments they’ve made already. As has been often pointed out, existing emissions-reductions commitments, which expire in 2030, are nowhere near sufficient to meet any reasonable climate goal (e.g. limiting global warming to 1.5° or 2° Celsius). And as the years since Paris tick by, it has also become apparent that many countries (now including the United States) are not on track to meet even those inadequate commitments. This is not good.

The role of the United States in this round of negotiations was an embarrassment, on many issues siding with long-standing obstructionists Saudi Arabia and Russia. Adding insult to injury, the State Department issued a statement declaring in part: “The United States is not taking on any burdens or financial pledges in support of the Paris Agreement.” This is true enough, but nothing to brag about. The statement also claimed that the United States “will work with our many partner countries to innovate and deploy a broad array of technologies that promote economic growth, improve energy security, and protect the environment.” I see no evidence that this is true. On the contrary, our government is engaged in an elaborate and silly exercise of denying the obvious and promoting outdated and dangerous energy technologies (fossil fuels), which they did in Poland with an exhibit showcasing the supposed role of fossil fuels in addressing climate change. This embarrassing display of willful ignorance was recognized and condemned, and thankfully also widely ignored. Perhaps most shamefully, the Trump administration also took credit for U.S. emissions reductions, which of course have resulted from Obama-era policies that they are busily dismantling. As unsatisfactory as all of this may be, it is about the best outcome that could have been expected from this round of

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WHRC is an independent research organization where scientists study climate change and how to solve it, from the Amazon to the Arctic. Learn more at www.whrc.org.


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