Is Scotland still an international leader in tackling climate change?

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By Ben Wray from Commonspace.

This is Climate Week in Scotland, just as scientists meet in the South Korean city of Incheon for crucial Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) talks ahead of a much anticipated reportย publication.

The anticipated outcome of the report (which will be published on 8 October) is that the IPCC will agree that emissions can rise no further than 1.5 degrees C above pre-industrial levels to stop catastrophic climate change. We have already passed the one per centย mark.

The Paris Summit agreed to keep emissions to โ€œwell below two degrees C above pre-industrial levels and to pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase even further to 1.5 degrees Cโ€, and a scientist at Incheon told the BBC that if the world were to adjust to fulfil the 1.5 degrees C limit โ€œour lives would never be theย sameโ€.

Those talks come after a summer heatwave which has heightened consciousness around the issue of climate change around the world. After a summer of forest fires in Sweden, the issue became a hot topic in the countryโ€™s elections last month. And in Scotland concern about climate change has been rising, with the Scottish Household Survey published last month showing that Scots are increasingly worried that climate change has become an โ€œimmediate and urgent problemโ€ requiring action, rising from 46 per cent to 61 per cent in the space of fourย years.

The Scottish Government has long been lauded internationally as a leader in its commitment to reducing carbon emissions, with its 2009 emissions targets considered by the UN to be among the most ambition in the world at the time. Those targets have been met ahead of schedule, with Scotland only trailing Sweden in Western Europe in terms of emission reduction performance toย date.

But nine years on, as scientists recalibrate their assessment of the speed with which emissions is undermining the worldโ€™s ecosystem and as we begin to see the real world effects kick-in, is Scotland still leadingย internationally?

At First Ministerโ€™s Questions last week a sharp exchanged ensued between Nicola Sturgeon and Greens co-convenor Patrick Harvie, where the latter said that a new BP oil development in the North Sea could make Scotlandโ€™s reputation as a climate leader aย โ€œshamโ€.

This brought about a strong rebuke from the FM, who defended her governmentโ€™s climate credentials and called for a more positive tone from the Greens, saying they should โ€œtake some pride in the fact that they are in a country that is recognised internationally as a worldย leaderโ€.

Whatโ€™s the truth? Is Scotland maintaining its position at the forefront of the fight against climate change, or is it in danger of fallingย behind?

In terms of targets, the draft Climate Change Bill has toughened targets for emissions reduction to a 66 per cent fall by 2032 and 90 per cent by 2050. Friends of the Earth Scotland have stated that unless the First Minister โ€œaims higher and improvesโ€ the targets, โ€œScotland cannot claim to be an international climate leaderโ€ anyย longer.

This was backed up by Mark Ruskell, Mid Scotland and Fife Green MSP, who said: โ€œThere is mounting scientific evidence, including leaks from the IPCCโ€™s upcoming global climate targets report, that unless decisive action is taken now we will see dangerous levels of warming by the 2040s. As a result, Scotland risks falling behind many countries, including Sweden, Iceland and New Zealand, who have committed to net-zero targets by 2050 at theย latest.โ€


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Sweden is perhaps ahead of the field with a statutory obligation to be carbon neutral by 2045. France and Portugal are aiming for carbon neutrality by 2050, Iceland by 2040, while New Zealand is pursuing a โ€œnet-zero billโ€, with a commitment from the government to be carbon neutral by 2050. Pressure is even being applied on the UK Government to establish a net-zero target, with 130 MPs signing a letter calling on the UK to be carbon neutral byย 2050.

While the Scottish Governmentโ€™s 90 per cent reduction by 2050 includes being carbon neutral, Friends of the Earth say that the aim should be to be neutral in all greenhouse gases, include toxic gases like methane. A Friends of the Earth Scotland spokesperson added: โ€œWith countries including Sweden, France and Portugal already committed to cutting their climate emissions to net-zero by 2050 or before, itโ€™s hard to see how the Scottish Government can claim to be world leaders when theyโ€™re only aiming to reach 90 per cent cuts byย 2050.

โ€œBut 2050 is far too late for the millions of people around the world already dealing with devastating climate impacts. Next weekโ€™s report from the IPCC will make clear that all countries need to step up and urgently cut emissions, and Scotland is no exception. If weโ€™re serious about curbing dangerous climate change, we need to see much more effort within the nextย decade.โ€

A progress report by the Committee on Climate Change (CCC) published last week said that the new targets were at โ€œthe limits of feasibilityโ€ based on the policy proposals in the climate change plan, while โ€œmore effortโ€ would be required if that was to be increased to 100 perย cent.

The committee highlighted the fact that a rapid fall in emissions in energy generation was โ€œmasking a lack of action in other areasโ€, where there had been โ€œno significant emissions reductionโ€ฆfor the past five yearsโ€, as the graph below from the CCC report clearlyย shows.

โ€œIf the emissions reduction to 2032 is to be achieved, similar policy advancements must be made across sectors including low-carbon heat, non-domestic buildings, agriculture, forestry, and waste,โ€ the committee reportย found.

The report, which praised the Scottish Government for being significantly ahead of the UK Government, went on to be particularly critical of efforts in agriculture, which they said has no โ€œregulatory approach in placeโ€, and โ€œambitions for emissions reduction have been further scaled backโ€. The CCC added that targets for tree planting and peatland restoration have been โ€œcontinually missedโ€ and said that โ€œnot all our recommendations have beenย implementedโ€.

Craig Dalzell, head of policy and research at the Common Weal think-tank, said the CCC report shows that the โ€œextremely significantโ€ progress that has been made in emissions reduction has been primarily based on โ€œrather low-hanging The CCC report found that โ€œtransport is now Scotlandโ€™s biggest sectoral challengeโ€, and Ruskell โ€“ who described the Scottish Government as โ€œclimate weakโ€ โ€“ called on the First Minister to do more to step up use of electric vehicles and bikeย journeys.

โ€œSales of electric vehicles in Scotland are now also behind the UK and emissions-heavy car journeys are rising, while low carbon transport options are experiencing a decline. The Scottish Government has an unambitious target for 10 per cent of everyday journeys to be made by bike in 2020, but so far it sits at 3 per cent,โ€ heย said.

Are any of these changes on a large enough scale to produce the sort of rapid, systemic shift that will inevitably have to fundamentally alter the nature of our economy andย society?

One draft paper for the UN 2019 sustainable development report by Finnish scientists has stated that advanced economies must be carbon neutral by 2040, and the rest of the world by 2050, to prevent catastrophic climate change. They argue that the current market-based economy โ€œcannot accomplish the taskโ€ of delivering this sort of rapid green transition, and stated that this can only be delivered by a fundamental shift in how the economy is organised towards state-led planning, where the emphasis in current economic orthodoxy on balanced budgets and low state deficits was replaced by a โ€œKeynesian world with planetary boundariesโ€. โ€œThis would require economic thinking that enables large public investment programs on the one hand and strong regulation and environmental caps on the other. In the modern global economy, states are the only actors that have the legitimacy and capacity to fund and organize large-scale transitions,โ€ theyย add.

Considered in this light, perhaps our understanding of make a country an โ€œinternational leaderโ€ has to change from being based on comparison with other countries targets and delivery, to being bold enough to do what the science says needs to be done.fruitโ€, leaving the more politically and financially challenging areas like transport (which could involve increasing costs for car usage and a major and costly overhaul of infrastructure) and heating (which infringes on the โ€˜big sixโ€™ energy companies and house builders) still to beย addressed.

โ€œAs Scotland makes the systemic changes required to decarbonise the transport sector and building heating (which together comprise 75 per cent of total energy demand) then this will place additional burden on the electricity generation sector,โ€ Dalzell said. โ€œCommon Weal has released several reports calling for all new buildings to be constructed to passive heating standards and for substantial acceleration in retrofits. Similarly, we have called for a systemic review of the UK national grid connection charges and feed-in tariff schemes to better support Scottish renewables. Without these, the goal of a zero-carbon Scotland will not beย met.โ€

Ben Wray is the editor of CommonSpace and tweets atย @ben_wray1989

Image credit: Alisdareย Hickson

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