Christiana Figueres, the UN climate chief who led the world to the Paris climate deal, spoke to a full house Monday evening at the Grantham Institute for Climate Changeโs annual lecture at Imperial College London.
As nations are set to gather in New York next week to sign the deal, Figueres told the audience that she expects the Paris Agreement to come into effect in 2018 โ two years earlier than expected.
But she was quick to point out that the success of COP21 was the easy part. Now, itโs time to achieve its goals and the clock is running out fast sheย said.
Her talk also emphasised the importance of tackling climate change in order to eradicate poverty and of the important role women have to play in getting us there.
Here we break down the 10 key takeaways from her speech.
1.Paris Deal Will Take Effect in 2018
โYou heard it here first, I think we will have the Paris agreement in effect by 2018,โ Figueres told the audience during the question period following the lecture.
As she explained, the original text of the Paris deal said that it would come into force in 2020.
โAt some pointโฆ the decision was made to remove that sentence,โ she described. โThe reason why that sentence was removed was because of a collective sense of actually, this could come into effect before 2020. It wasnโt that we made a mistake, there was a collective decision.โ
Nations will be arriving in New York City next week to sign the Paris Agreement on April 22. The signing will be open for a full year, however there is much anticipation to see how many countries show up to sign on the first day.
The current record for the most signatures on the opening day of an international treaty is the Law of the Sea, where 119 nations signed. Currently, 130 countries have confirmed they will come to New York to sign the Paris Agreement, and half of those will be represented by their heads of state or government โ โwhich is just amazing,โ Figueres exclaimed.
The Paris deal will come into effect only once at least 55 countries that represent at least 55 percent of our greenhouse gas emissions have ratified the deal.
2.COP21 Was the Easy Part
โWe have a stark choice in front of us,โ Figueres said. โParis points in one direction, but that is only a blueprint.โ
โAs difficult as the Paris agreement wasโฆ it took the entire worldโฆ to contribute to it, and yet, that was the easy part. Now we come to the difficult part because now we have to be intentional about everything that we do.โ
โWe need to be prepared to think about the choices we are making,โ she warned. โThe choice is for us, nobody can exempt you from making that choice.โ
3.Weโre 10 Years Too Late
โI feel frankly that Iโve swallowed an alarm clock because of all this,โ Figueres told the audience. โSo I invite all of you to swallow an alarm clock because it really does make a difference what weโre doing today.โ
โItโs fantastic we got a Paris Agreement, but the Paris Agreement is 10 years too late,โ she said. โAnd it has really put an incredible amount of pressure on to innovation, onto energy evolution, because now we have to get to being able to get peaking [emissions] very soon and descent, and we should have had a little more time, but we have actually exhausted that time.โ
Figueres broke down the time frame and urgency from a carbon budget perspective: โIf you express it in emissions we get a very clear picture.โ
As she described, we have already emitted 2,000 gigatons of CO2 into the atmosphere. โUnless we invent some huge vacuum cleaner that is going to zap that out from the atmosphere, that is going to stay there for hundreds of years.โ
If we want to keep average global temperature increase to 2C, there are only 1,000 gigatons left to emit. โNot for this year, this decade or this century,โ she emphasized, โwe would only have 1,000 gigatons left for the rest of the time that human society decides to live on this planet.โ
Now, if the world wants to keep warming to just 1.5C, there are only 600 gigatons left.
Putting it into perspective, each year the world emits 32 gigatons. So at our current business as usual rate, we would reach the 600 gigatons limit in less than 19 years, 1,000 gigatons in about 31 years.
Under the Paris deal, the world has agreed to reach net zero emissions by the second half of this century. In order to do, our emissions must peak, and then drop, very quickly.
โIn my book, we would have to peak by 2020,โ she said. โThat is not where we are right now. Our business as usual would have us peaking at between 2025 and 2035. So you can see what I mean by the Paris Agreement being 10 years too late.โ
4.Climate Change Has an Inbuilt Physical Urgency
Part of what makes the challenge of climate change unique is that is has an โinbuilt physical urgencyโ beyond its social, moral and economic urgency, described Figueres.
โThat physical urgency has very little elasticity, in fact, we are two minutes to midnight on climate change.โ
โA world that goes over 2 degrees would have human costs in addition to the economic costs beyond anything that we would feel is responsible for us as human beings,โ she said. โBecause the loss of land, of livelihood, the loss of homes, and the loss of life, would be unmeasurable.โ
โWe do have physical urgency in keeping the increase in temperature to well below 2 degrees or 1.5.โ
5.A World Beyond 2C Is Systemically Uninsurable
The insurance sector is โthe risk guru of the worldโ described Figueres, emphasizing that global climate change is โthe highest risk we have ever facedโ.
โThey have decided that a world that goes above 2 degrees is uninsurable,โ she said. โNot that they wonโt be able to insure your home or your business, but what theyโre saying is a world that goes above 2 degrees is systemically uninsurable. Can you image you would live in an economy that is systemically uninsurable?โ
6.Thereโs Only One Way to Go for Economic Growth
โWe cannot afford, as a society, to increase access [to energy] or to solve poverty โ as some would argue โ with high carbon. It is just absolutely anathema,โ Figueres said.
Highlighting several of the areas focused on by the Sustainable Development Goals such as access to energy, economic growth, and industrial innovation, Figueres argued there is only one way we can move: towards a low carbon economy.
โYes we have to improve access to energy around the world, but thereโs only one direct that can occur, and that is toward low carbon energyโฆ Itโs the same [with economic growth.] Yes we need economic growthโฆ but thereโs only one way that the economic growth can go and thatโs decoupling GHG7.The Quality of Investment Matters
As Figueres put it: โThe quality of investment today equals the investment of energy tomorrow equals the quality of life forever.โ
This brings home the โimportance of todayโ she said.
โIt is not correct to think weโre going to deal with climate change tomorrow, or by the year 2050. We have to deal with it today, we have to make an intentional choice to actually invest into R&D, into all kinds of technological innovation, into resilient infrastructure, low carbon infrastructure. Otherwise, weโre locking ourselves in.โ
And with the cost of renewable energy, for example, continuing to drop, while efficiency improves, thereโs no time like the present to start investing.
8.More Carbon Equals More Poverty
There is a causal relationship between climate change and poverty said Figueres. โMore carbon equals more poverty. And it is in nobodyโs interest to have more poverty.โ
โNow let me be specific, more carbon in the atmostphere, not carbon in the soil, but more carbon in the atmosphereโฆ equals more poverty. And it especially equals more poverty among the already poor and vulnerable populations.โ
This is because climate change will impact food and water security, as well as increase health costs, all of which produce higher costs for national economies and โdisproportionally affects those at the bottom of the pyramidโ.
โIf I were to summarize the Paris agreement into one sentence I would say the Paris agreement is all about how are we going to decouple GDPโฆ from GHG?โ she said. โBecause GDP, economic growth, and greenhouse gas emissions have been increasing hand in hand for 150 years and that can no longer be the case.โ
โWe need to decouple those two curves. If we donโt do that, we are actually sealing ourselves into a world of more inequality.โ
9.Zero Carbon Only Way to Make Poverty Eradication Possible
โNet zero emissions is actually the only way to make poverty eradication possible at all,โ Figueres said.
While poverty is affected or magnified by other things beyond the carbon intensity of energy, โthere is a very, very close relationship between zero carbonโฆ and less povertyโ she said, explaining that decarbonisation allows for the world to restore its lands, improve agricultural productivity, stabilise aquifer, and increase access to energy. Not just that, but it would help improve the resilience of our infrastructure and allow for energy independence.
โGoing to that zero emissions [goal] is the only way we stand any chance of eradicating poverty, less poverty in the world, which is our common goal here, is actually the only way to ensure we can withstand the impacts of climate change.โ
She added: โItโs a very simple conclusion. Yes more carbon equals more poverty. But also less carbon equals more growth, more jobs, more stability, more benefit for everyone.โ
10.The Only Way to Move Forward Is To Walk With Both Feet
Figueres told the audience that there is โa very interesting phenomenon, that there is a preponderance of men in the energy sector and a growing preponderance of women in the climate change sector. Whatโs that that all about?โ
โMaybe one could say, well maybe women are working on the solution part,โ she laughed.
Describing this phenomenon in simplistic terms, Figueres said itโs in part because women tend to think more long-term, and are generally more inclusive and collaborative.
โCan you imagine any topic that needs more inclusion or collaboration than climate change?โ she asked.
โMaybe what we need now is more participation,โ she argued, โbecause we have for thousands of years, as a human raceโฆ frankly my dear friends, we have been hobbling along, hopping with 50 percent of the talent, 50 percent of the productivity, 50 percent of the potential of mankind.โ
โWe have two genders, in case you havenโt noticed, and we have two feet. So the only way to move forward is to use both our feet, ok?โ
She continued: โIt does us no good to keep 50 percent of the potential, 50 percent of the skills, somewhere in a closet. Bring that 50 percent out and let us contribute to the solution, because hopping with 50 percent hasnโt really gotten us very far.โ
Photo: UN Climate Change viaย Flickr
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