Riominus20 – Chapter 3: The Legacy

9 July 2012

Two days after the Río+20 summit came to a close, on 24 June, news of the event barely took up four paragraphs in the Santiago de Chile daily “El Mercurio” and failed to make the pages of the International Herald Tribune. Ten days later, media interest in Rio+20 has all but disappeared, apart from an incident involving some crafty Rio de Janeiro villains who made off with money and documents belonging to Niger’s Education delegate. She was prevented from boarding her flight home and she’s still at a loose end in Rio enjoying the hospitality of a local translator. For its part, Rio’s foremost daily and Brazil’s number two in circulation terms, “O Globo”, held on 3 July a seminar on “Rio+20: The Legacy”, with Brazil’s Environment Minister, Ms. Isabella Teixeira, as guest speaker.

But what kind of legacy has Rio+20 left behind? The following five issues might point us in the right direction:
The first part of this Legacy that we need to look at is our own perception of the phenomenon: Rio+20 has come to represent the consecration of a certain type of narrative on sustainability:

Media are neither innocuous nor neutral where climate change is concerned and, possibly influenced by the parallel forum, the so-called “People’s Summit”, held on the other side of Rio and which called into question the role of business as a provider of sustainable development solutions, the media mirrored discontent and ire in statements such as “Rio summit closes among criticism for the weak accord without clear and measurable targets”; “failure for want of ambition”; leaders “did not take on the responsibility to impose actions, targets and schedules”; the result is “an abstract document far-removed from reality”, and so on.

The role of the media is not being taken into account in the perception and the speed required for change. In response to O Globo, Rajendra Pachauri pointed out that “a change in perception, priorities and direction is called for”. This process of change requires a huge communication effort in which media cannot be content to stand in the wings. Basically, some media appear to be more concerned with dishing up controversy than presenting the cold facts, and this favors the climate change negationist fraternity, as pointed out in the recently published “The Inquisition of Climate Science” which deals with the role of the media in the face of climate change.
Legacy number two comes in the shape of the progress made thus far. We can safely say that Rio+20 was definitely not a place for people who like jumping to conclusions, but, nonetheless, conclusions there were, namely:

In the first place, Rio+20 gives us an overall document which, in the words of the WBCSD’s new Chairman, Peter Bakker “confirms that the world still has a platform for seeking out shared solutions”. He goes on to say that “had it not been so, it would have been extremely hard to convey a message underscoring the urgent need for sustainability and the changes required”. We’re making progress but, to paraphrase Bakker, “surmounting a global emergency by means of a multilateral process, which involves getting 193 countries to agree on a text, is something from which we cannot expect miracles”. As UN Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon said only a few days ago “this agreement is a triumph of multilateralism”.

Thirdly, Rio+20 acknowledges and calls on companies to play a relevant role in achieving Sustainable Development, and highlights three aspects of the contribution that can be made by the business community: innovation, collaboration agreements and advising governments with recommendations on policy decisions, as explained in the Global Compact document “Overview & Outcomes” on the conclusions of the Corporate Sustainability Forum, an event held just days after the official Rio summit. This second legacy, however, turns out to be a double-edged sword: although it recognizes the private sector’s capacities and resources for innovation, collaboration and policy recommendations and puts the onus of responsibility for them on companies, there is no sign of companies’ official capability to influence those policies and regulatory frameworks, without which any recommendation is just a waste of breath.

In the fourth place, the clear overlap of the Rio summit’s three relevant final documents: The Future we Want, the official document signed by heads of state; Overview & Outcomes, the document that emerged from the Global Compact Corporate Sustainability Forum and, undoubtedly representative despite coming out prior to the summit, the WBCSD’s Changing Pace. All three of them, using more or less decorative prose, call for and acknowledge the need for urgent action on climate change and the private sector’s relevant role, and stress the importance of listening to all the parties involved in arriving at policies aimed at implementing measures. This overlap takes the focus off private sector participation and directs it at Sustainable Development. It would be a good thing if these organizations were to work together and coordinate their efforts (they are, after all, the first ones to call for such efforts) and thus gain in efficiency.

Fifth, Rio+20 leaves us with the feeling that the call for collaboration between governments, companies and civil society and the trend among the more forward-thinking companies* to adopt initiatives and not expect too much in the way of major accords, is swelling its ranks and more quickly than appearances would have us believe, with more and more companies and organizations getting directly involved in sustainable development. In recent years, the number of companies with Sustainability strategies in place has grown four-fold. And so we come away from Rio+20 with the feeling that we could be on the verge of a sea-change and that there is hope for a real shift.

*In this case “progressive companies” are those which have committed to and defend a certain way of doing business and are convinced of the need to take into account social and environmental factors when it comes to exercising their responsibility, and which actively and publicly participate in favor of policy changes aimed at fighting climate change, ensuring a carbon-free economy and striving for a planet fit for future generations.

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Riominus20 – Chapter2

9 July 2012

This chapter concludes this brief look at the salient points of “The Future we Want”, the outcome document adopted at Rio+20:

47. Companies: the original document encouraged mandatory corporate reporting on Sustainability; the outcome document, however, merely acknowledges its importance.

84-85. Creation of a high-level forum: This is a step forward; at the Brazil summit the Sustainable Development Committee was not at the ministerial level. From now on, environment talks will be held at the political level rather than a technical one.

88. On the role of the UNEP: The UNEP will not become an independent agency, as initially requested, but some diplomats say that in the future it will go from the current 52 members to membership of all of the UN member-states, and that, although it is currently financed through donations, it will have its own budget set by the UN.

104: To ensure current commitments stemming from prior Sustainable Development summits, the original document called on countries to reduce the existing gaps regarding implementation; in the end, no specific actions on current sector-targets were decided.

139. Health: Call for steps to ensure universal health coverage. This coverage is referred to in the outcome document but the latter talks of its “importance” and makes no mention to health coverage as a “right”.

158. Oceans: Originally called for protection for the diversity of the high seas and international waters, as well as restrictions on fishing subsidies. The final draft mentions restrictions on subsidies. However, the intended reference to protection of biodiversity was removed at the last minute following pressures from Venezuela, USA, Canada, Japan and Russia.

193. Forests: The document originally referred to the conservation of forests and the fight on deforestation as one of the ways of achieving sustainable development. It was understood that through this recommendation, governments and international organizations would draw up concrete steps for reforestation. The final document recognizes that is important to deal with the issue but fails to list the appropriate forums.

238. Women: The document originally mentioned “women’s reproductive rights”. The final draft of the outcome document omitted the mention that in some countries the reference was to the right of abortion. The chairperson of the Global Fund for Women, Musimbi Kanyoro, spoke out against pressures from The Vatican to omit the expression “women’s reproductive rights”, which was finally left out. We cannot forget that the world population is on the rise and that, consequently, there is an increasingly greater demand for resources. These are two of the main factors behind Climate Change.

And finally, points 130 and 225. Energy: Although we’ve covered this issue previously, it’s worth stressing that perhaps as a result of pressures from OPEC member states, one of the critical issues, namely the elimination of fossil fuel subsidies, warrants no more than a paragraph and is banished to the Consumer section (22) when, by rights and according to logic, it should be included in the Energy section (130).
In the original document, in section 130 it was stated that “we recognize the need for further action to rationalize and phase out subsidies”. In the final document, however, it was replaced by “countries reaffirm the commitments they have made to phase out”. In other words, we go from recognizing the need to take steps, to countries reaffirming the commitments that they have undertaken.

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Is it possible to double the share of renewable energy in the global energy mix? Rio+20-June16

Is it possible to double the share of renewable energy in the global energy mix? Rio+20-June16

16 June 2012

Sustainable Energy for All

We  participated today in the session: Double share of Renewable Energy in the Global Energy Mix to achieve Sustainable Energy for all.

Sustainable Energy  for All” is the  Secretary General Ban Ki Moon initiative, whose goals are: ensuring universal access to modern energy  services by 2030; doubling  the  global rate of improvement in energy efficiency by 2030; and doubling the share of  renewable energy  in the global energy mix by 2030.

How to double  this share is our  topic today.

It is  a privilege to be in the Global Compact Corporate Sustainability Forum, and to have the opportunity to share our vision on how to double the renewable energy percentage in the global energy mix.

I consider five key  issues to make this possible:

First: renewable energy is a capital intensive business, disbursement of investment capital is make effective all in year 0. On the cost side, along with the operating costs you are paying financial costs for twenty years. The revenues came from three factors, PPA’s (power purchase agreement) FITs (Feed in Tariff) and the Load Factor (ratio between operating hours of your facility and the 8760 yearly hours). To  function properly, this model needs stability.

The first condition to double the renewable energy percentage in the global energy mix is a minimum regulatory framework. To maintain a positive evolution and investment stimulus it is necessary a degree of stability, predictability and long-term orientation on policy that is nonexistent today.

Second: A necessary step to advance is to gradually remove subsidies to fossil fuels so as to achieve a real competitive market reflecting the real prices of all technologies.

In the  document The future we want”, which is being  discussed now in  Rio, and is meant to be the official document to  be signed by  chiefs of state in the  next days;  in the  Section V: Framework for  action, in the  ENERGY section, #6 in a shy manner but clearly, is stated that fossil fuels subsidies inhibit  sustainable development.

Third: The implementation success of the different measures have to take place during the present decade, otherwise, the negative effects would be very difficult to reverse. One of them is to lock-in the  GHG emissions trajectory. The last  measures of the Mauna Loa  observatory (April 2012) registered more  than  393ppm’s of  CO2 in the  atmosphere. We are in close danger  to  surpass the  450ppm’s goal for 2050.

Fourth: there are still 1,5 billion people in the world without access to electricity and it is Goverments and Leader Business Companies who have the responsibility of reducing this number down to the minimum. Distributed energy systems out of renewable energy are part of the solution to provide electricity to this rural areas, isolated from the grid.

Fifth: we need a stable and supporting regulatory framework that combines utilities and distributed energy in urban areas. Smart grids and fully  integrating renewable energy are the right path to take. Of course, this will require a considerable investment which, in the long term will imply cost savings, improving energy  efficiency and security  of supply and last but not least, reducing costs and GHG emissions.

World Environment Day

5 June 2012

Today, June 5th, we mark World Environment Day, established by the United Nations General Assembly. This year, the theme is “Green Economy: Does it include you?” ACCIONA wants to join in the celebrations by making its environment commitment known to one and all.

We invite you to visit this page where you will find what we do at ACCIONA.

Fourth major truth on Climate Change: Human activity is the main cause of global warming

29 May 2012

Analyzing gas bubbles inside ice cores drilled in deep Antartic ice, we know that the pre-industrial concentration of CO2 (prior to 1750 AD) was 280 ppm. 2007 readings showed that it had risen to 383 ppm. More than 70% of the increase in greenhouse gases (GHG), came about after 1970. At the latest readings taken last April by Hawaii’s Mauna Lau Observatory, it stood at 396.18 ppm. “This worldwide rise in CO2 concentration stems mainly from the planet’s use of fossil fuels” (Source IPCC, p.37).

The US-Russian-French research station located in Vostok, in Eastern Antarctica, is researching the deepest ice cores, which have been used to reconstruct the latest 400,000 years of development: the current situation bears no resemblance at all to that particular period. The scientific community is looking into the possible causes of global warming or cooling of the planet, both natural and man-made: the anthropogenic (man-made) causes which are contributing to global warming are the rise in GHGs, or the tropospheric ozone; but scientists have also conducted research into the cooling effect of other man-made factors such aerosol sprays and increased surface albedo stemming from changes in land usage. Similarly, solar variation as an important natural factor contributing to global warming, and volcanic eruptions as a natural contributing factor to cooling, are also the subject of ongoing research.

By reviewing and analyzing the results of the studies that have been conducted so far, the latest IPCC Report (2007) stated with a certain degree of accuracy for the first time ever (it was not so clear in previous Reports) that the main cause of global warming are anthropogenic in origin GHGs.

This analysis should dispel the existing doubts that appear regularly concerning climate change as an unequivocal phenomenon on which man-made activity has an unquestionable effect. Scientific knowledge continues to advance and it is quite likely that in the next few years the complex simulation models will have developed considerably and will allow us to understand the variables that determine the speed at which the process is evolving.

Meanwhile, a part of the debate focuses on deciding whether or not it is really worth making climate change a transversal constraint on many policies, with the subsequent economic impact that this entails. I recommend you take a look at a selection of videos that, combining a keen sense of humor and indisputable knowledge, deal with the negation of scientific evidence on climate change, and maybe even shed some light on the political attitude of delaying measures for mitigating climate change. I’ll be sharing with you six more major truths about climate change in the next weeks.

See “The ten truths of climate change”

Third major truth on Climate Change: Global warming levels are significant

17 April 2012

The body of scientific evidence documenting the rise of global temperatures is, by now, incontrovertible, as are data showing that the rise is being caused by the concentration of man-made greenhouse gases. If this trend is allowed to continue, we must be prepared for radical changes in our physical world.

The data gathered show that the planet’s average temperature has gone up 0.74ºC over the past one hundred years, while modeling predicts that it is set to rise between 2ºC – 5ºC before the end of the century. For a layman, it is hard to fully grasp the importance of these increases, bearing in mind that the variations in temperature on a daily or seasonal basis, to which we are accustomed, are much higher. We need to change our perspective and remember that we are dealing with average global temperatures. These numbers acquire their full importance when you consider that 5ºC is the difference that exists between the current average global temperature and the one in the last Ice Age. A mere 5ºC difference between us the last Ice Age! What are we going to call this planet that we are overheating with our activity? “The Scorched Age” or the Anthropocene?

In a few years’ time we won’t need to classify our era based on climate change because its effects will be clear to see. The most reliable set of data until now, the IPCC Report, has already made a link between man-made greenhouse gas emissions and the increasing frequency of extreme rainfall, and the increasing rise in the minimum and maximum daily temperatures. Similarly, the UNEP’s report “Keeping Track” (linked to the Global Environmental Outlook-5 (GEO-5), highlights the rapid changes that have taken place over the past twenty years owing to the accumulation of the effects of human activity on the climate system.

DARA’s Climate Vulnerability Monitor indicates an estimated 350,000 deaths annually directly related to climate change; over the next ten years that figure will rise to five million and, according to its calculations, from 2030 onwards we can expect one million deaths a year caused by climate change. Today 80% of all climate-related deaths affect children living in Southern Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa.

 

See “The ten truths of climate change”

Second Truth about Climate Change: it comes from long ago

26 March 2012

Scientists have been concerned about global warming for some time now, it’s nothing new. What is new, however, is that extreme climate events are occurring with increasing frequency and intensity.
The so-called “greenhouse effect” that certain gases (known as GHGs) produce in the Earth’s atmosphere is a natural phenomenon that allows temperatures to be warm enough for life to flourish on the planet. This is not a recent discovery: the relationship between CO2, water vapor, other GHGs and the Earth’s climate was already the subject of study back in the 19th century: Fourier discovered that the atmosphere retains heat, and later Tyndall identified a number of molecules responsible for capturing the heat. It was Arrhenius who, at the turn of the 20th century, stated that a two-fold increase in the amount of CO2 in the Earth’s atmosphere would lead to significant temperature changes on the surface of the planet. In 1958, Keeling began to undertake what was to become the longest ever monitoring of CO2 quantities in the atmosphere from his base at the Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii. In 1979 the first World Climate Conference was held and experts identified Climate Change as an urgent problem on a planetary scale; this led to the setting-up, in 1988, of The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). The IPCC itself does not conduct research: it reviews all current worldwide research work on Climate Change and presents it in Assessment Reports. Science has advanced considerably since Fourier’s day thanks to the scientific community’s growing dedication to Climate Change. Today it is possible to gauge more and more accurately the relationship between CO2 and temperatures, a key factor in the study of Climate Change. The latest IPCC Assessment Report (AR4) brings together the research work of 174 experts, all members of the scientific community. Since publishing its first Assessment Report, the IPCC has come to increasingly solid conclusions, incorporating a growing mass of reviewed scientific material. On March 28th, the IPCC will launch the Special Report on Managing the Risks of Extreme Events and Disasters to Advance Climate Change Adaptation (SREX). Can you see how directly Climate Change is affecting our society and the business world? To be continued…
Helping to regain trust in scientific evidence on Climate Change is a shared responsibility for everyone committed to Sustainable Development.

See “The ten truths of climate change”

ACCIONA and World Water Day 2012

22 March 2012

Today is World Water Day. This year the theme is “The world is thirsty because we are hungry” and the UN is attempting to drive home just how important water is for the food industry given that most of the water we “drink” actually reaches us through the food we eat.

According to a KPMG report “Expect the Unexpected”, water shortage will be a serious obstacle to growth and development in many companies between now and the year 2030.

While water coverage has increased by 87%, the world  is still far from the sanitation target of 75%, according to the report  Keeping Track of Our Changing Environment”, drawn up by the UN Environment Programme.

ACCIONA Agua has been working for more than 30 years to help make water shortage a thing of the past. At our Technology Center in Barcelona, we carry out ongoing research into water- and wastewater treatment and desalination. Because solutions don’t always rain down on us.

The First Truth: Global warming is a reality

15 March 2012

Scientific observations differ fundamentally from a layman’s day-to-day ones, of the coffee-bar kind. That fact that we think it’s getting hotter by the day in our particular neck of the woods isn’t conclusive proof of the existence of climate change. And vice versa, winters with snowfalls and cold spells aren’t enough to show that climate change doesn’t exist. Scientists assure us that temperatures will rise exponentially in the long term. In the past fifty years, average temperatures have doubled compared with the average figure for the past one hundred years. The past ten-year period has been the hottest on record. Eighteen out of the past twenty years have been the hottest-ever. Temperatures have been recorded since 1850, and the increasingly more comprehensive information they provide just go to strengthen certainty: the world’s most-renowned climate research centers all agree that there is a clear and undeniable trend towards global warming (USA: NOAA 2011, NASA 2011; UK: UK-Met Office 2011; Japan: JMA 2011). Moreover, the average temperature increase is not the same in all parts of the planet: changes are more extreme in Northern parts of the globe.

Global warming is not a future event: it’s already here. The sea level is on the rise (an average 2.5 mm/year between 1992 and 2001), the acidity levels of the oceans are increasing (30% up since the Industrial Revolution), glaciers are melting (80.7m per year in the past ten years) and so too are the Polar ice-caps (35% in the Arctic since 1992). Studies carried out on thousands of species show extraordinary changes in migration patterns in terms of both altitude and latitude. One particular study involving 1,700 species registered shifts of 40km towards the North Pole and 6 meters per decade in Alpine regions during the second half of the 20th century.

Something is causing the planet to get warmer: there’s no room for doubt for either the informed but less demanding layman or the seasoned scientist.

The scientific community is more than sure and, as an example, we’re giving you this link to an article published recently in the Wall Street Journal, signed by more than 40 top-level researchers, stating that “Research shows that more than 97% of scientists actively publishing in the field agree that climate change is real and human caused”.

This is the first truth of the “ten truths of climate change”

 

The ten truths of climate change

15 March 2012

We are starting today a series of posts about Climate Change. This phenomenon has originated heated debate, some of it plainly absurd, particularly when the arguments flout scientific evidence.  To counter the confusion sewn by climate skeptics, we are taking this initiative on issues we consider to be self-evident.

In recent years, scientific research on climate change has been coordinated in an effort to acquire deeper knowledge of this phenomenon. In an unprecedented display of collective responsibility, policies have been drawn up aimed at fostering a low-carbon economy and fighting climate change.

Even so, we are constantly being presented with biased, and at times contradictory, information that leaves the non-specialist feeling confused. We need to stop and take stock of the key facts in order to arrive at a set of reasonably-founded affirmations: Ten truths that we want to share in this blog.

  1. The First Truth: Global warming is a reality
  2. Second Truth about Climate Change: it comes from long ago
  3. Third major truth on Climate Change: Global warming levels are significant
  4. Fourth major truth on Climate Change: Human activity is the main cause of global warming

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