III
Entitlements for the heaviest emitters
The worst aspect of the Kyoto Protocol is
that it has already given the heaviest emitters of greenhouse gases, namely, the
industrialised countries full entitlements to their heavy current emissions
minus the small amounts that they are expected to reduce as a percentage of their current
emissions. The final level of emissions that industrialised countries are expected to
reach in their first commitment period from 2008 to 2012 is described as their
assigned amount. But, in the Kyoto Protocol, this assigned
amount has gone well beyond being a mere target to be reached. It has been turned
into an entitlement by giving developed nations full property
rights over these assigned amounts. Under the Kyoto Protocol, the
property rights bestowed on the assigned amounts include:
The right of a nation to use the assigned
amount (Article 3 of the Kyoto Protocol).
The right of a nation to trade any part
of the assigned amount it is not going to use (Article 3, paragraphs 10, 11 and 12 of the
Kyoto Protocol).
The right of a nation to bank any part of
the assigned amount it is not going to use in the first committment period for use in
future commitment periods.
It is hard to think of what other property
rights can be bestowed on the assigned amount an entitlement created
out of current emissions.
This provision of full property rights
over the assigned amounts of industrialised countries, which takes them well
beyond being mere targets to be reached, have, firstly, opened up vast opportunities for
hot air to be traded Russia, for instance, can now trade a large
part of its assigned amount which it is quite unlikely to use even without mending any of
its current enegy-efficient ways because of its economic collapse. It has been estimated
that even if the US were to stabilise at its estimated 1997 carbon dioxide emissions,
which were 6 per cent over the 1990 emissions, it can still meet its Kyoto Protocol
reduction targets for 2008 to 2012 simply by trading emissions with Russia and Ukraine
because they have such large assigned amounts which they are not going to use because of
their economic collapse.
Secondly, the system of property rights
attached by the Kyoto Protocol has left developing countries without any entitlements of
their own. Even though their per capita emissions are currently and have historically
been low, they cannot bank any emissions for use by their future generations. The only
rationale for trading emissions between industrialised countries and developing countries
is that reducing emissions in developing countries will be far more cheaper than
undertaking emissions reduction in industrialised countries. Though the guiding principles
of the Kyoto Protocol say that all measures that are undertaken to protect the global
climate system should bring benefits to both the present and future generations and,
furthermore, they should be built on the basis of equity (Article 3 of the Framework
Convention on Climate Change), there is nothing in the Kyoto Protocol that gives credence
to these principles. Firstly, entitlements, built around current emissions, have been
created on the basis of a most unjust principle. And, secondly, there is nothing in the KP
that protects the rights of the future generations living in developing countries.
The principles of emissions
trading (under Article 17) which have to be elaborated at the next Conference of
Parties, to be held in November in Buenos Aires, must now be built upon the equitous
principle of equal per capita entitlements for all people on earth. Not
only would such a step be globally just and in conformity with the principles of the
Framework Convention on Climate Change, environmentalists and diplomats must also realise
that it would be the best way to take the world towards the ultimate objective
of the Convention, namely, the stabilisation of the atmospheric concentrations of the
greenhouse gases, far faster and better than the creative accounting strategy
presently inherent in the Kyoto Protocol.
Unlike the Eastern European countries
and Russia, which cannot use their assigned amounts built on 1990 emissions because of
their economic problems, developing countries, and especially the larger developing
countries like China and India are growing at a rapid rate. Any entitlement they obtain
would get used up steadily over the years. But as it is unikely they can use up their
assigned amount in the immediate future, they would have the potential to trade their
unused entitlements. This provision would immediately give them the incentive to trade
not merely to help industrialised countries to "meet their targets, so
ingeniously stated in the Kyoto Protocol, but also to move towards a low-emissions
developmental path themselves so that the benefits from trading emissions can stay with
them for a longer time. The trading system would also provide them with sufficient
financial resources and an "enabling economic environment for technology
transfer" to be created place, as indicated in Article 10 of the Kyoto Protocol.
It is quite likely that such an economic
environment would help to create a global market for Western solar energy technologies
first in developing countries and then later in industrialised countries and
help to kick-start the global transition towards zero-emissions technologies. The faster
these technologies invade the energy sector, quicker would the world be able to avert the
threat of climate change. If India were to find the current high cost of a solar power
plant subsidised by the economic advantages obtained by trading the saved emissions more
competitive than than the cost of building a coal-based power station, it is quite likely
to think in terms of investing in a solar power project. Such a development would not only
help to create a market for solar energy technologies worldwide, because increased sales
would lead to decreases in costs, but also create jobs in the solar industry worldwide.
What holds true for India would equally hold true for all other countries.
In this way, developing countries would
enter into the most meaningful form of participation to use the oft-repeated US
phrase. In fact, the emissions trading price should be pegged more to a cost that
would encourage developing countries, which have more solar energy, to move away from
fossil fuels rather than providing the cheapest alternative to the cost of reducing
greenhouse gas emissions in industrialised countries. Such trading would truly help to
prevent climate change instead of the creative carbon accounting that is
currently envisaged "to help industrialised countries to meet their reduction
targets".
IV
Resolving the difficulties for industrialised countries
While it is true that the entitlements that
would accrue to industrialised countries under the equal per capita
entitlements principle, would be far less than the assigned amounts that have been
given to them on the basis of current emissions under the Kyoto Protocol, and therefore it
would be economically very difficult for them to accept such low entitlements and
therefore high reduction targets, right away. But the reduction targets could be
negotiated in successive committment periods in a way that they steadily move towards
assigned amounts based on per capita entitlements without disrupting their
economies even as developing countries get an opportunity to trade their unused
entitlements and use those resources to move towards a slower emissions growth
trajectory.
Given the fact that developing countries
have a high population growth trajectory, the population distribution of the world could
be frozen as of an agreed date in order to avoid giving developing countries an unfair
advantage and a perverse incentive to increase their populations.
Equal per capita entitlements could be
built on one or a combination of the following concepts:
The emissions absorbed annually by the
global atmospheric sinks, especially which arise out of common resources like the oceans,
could be distributed equally amongst all the people of the world thus providing each
person with an equal entitlement.
A long-term per capita emissions
convergence target could be identified and each person could be given that as an
entitlement. This target itself could be kept flexible which can be moved up or down based
on latest scientific information available.
Atmospheric concentration targets of
different greenhouse gases could be agreed upon to be reached by an agreed year, keeping
in mind that the targetted concentration does not threaten to seriously destabilise the
global climate, and then the global emissions budget that would allow humanity to reach
that concentration target could be equally distributed among all nations on the basis of
equal per capita entitlements. Such a contraction and convergence strategy
would again hurt industrialised countries economically if the principle of equal per
capita entitlements was implemented immediately. However, once the principle is accepted,
the national entitlements can be steadily phased in towards a convergence point of equal
per capita entitlements over successive commitment periods. At the same time the targetted
atmospheric concentration could be kept subject to review based on latest scientific
information available.
It is obvious that in the future the
world will have to accept some common maximum per capita emission for each country in
order to deal with global warming. We cant have a world in which some
countries have to freeze their carbon dioxide emissions at one level and other countries
at another level. This would mean freezing global inequality. A convergence
principle towards a just and sustainable norm can be the only rational principle in such a
situation those who have higher emissions than the norm cut back to the
norm and those who have emissions below the norm can reach upto the norm.
The per capita principle may sound harsh to
many in industrialised countries. On the other hand, it is a very gracious position
for developing countries to take because such a position is only asking for the future
benefits of the atmosphere to be shared equitably. It is not asking for the
factoring in of the past emissions of the industrialised countries which began with the
Industrial Revolution and which have already accumulated in large quantities in the
atmosphere.
In sum, what developing countries should not and nor
should industrialised countries expect them to accept is the principle of trading
emissions or, for that matter, international cooperation to prevent climate change which
is built on the argument that developing countries provide a lucrative opportunity to
reduce emissions cheaply than in industrialised countries. Trading and cooperation must be
built on equitable emission entitlements. Trading cannot simply be carried out to achieve
economic efficiency. It must be undertaken in an environment that also promotes ecological
efficiency and social efficiency (social justice). |