Climate Change Takes Center Stage

Oct. 17, 2007
Several news releases and recent conferences might indicate that things are heating up on the global climate change front.

Several news releases and recent conferences might indicate that things are heating up on the global climate front. Here is an edited version of some events reported by several sources that could impact your bottom line:

  • “Climate change has moved to the top of everyone’s agenda, including world leaders, businesses, and citizens,” said Christopher Flavin, president of the Worldwatch Institute, at the recent American Gas Foundation’s Natural Gas & Climate Change Forum.
  • A Canadian news source reports: “If the momentum on the environment seems large now, it’s likely to be unstoppable as 2007 progresses. One reason is that the current year stands a good chance of going down as the hottest since modern recordkeeping began in the 1850s.”
  • In his speech to a conference of energy representatives of world leaders in the first major economics meeting on Energy Security and Climate Change last month in Washington, D.C., President Bush said it’s time for some serious attempts by his administration to set mandatory standards for reducing greenhouse-gas (GHG) emissions. He emphasized that it’s time to “consider national goals and strategies over the mid-term – reflecting each nation’s own mix of energy sources, future energy needs, and development priorities – to address the challenges of energy security and climate change, and discuss what more needs to be done.”

But, that effort runs squarely into the economic and political interests of the participating nations, none of which want to sacrifice growth to alleviate climate threats to the planet. The White House stipulates, “The President's international energy security and climate change initiative recognizes that responsible action to address climate change and economic growth go hand in hand. It is only through strong economies that we can sustain the investment necessary to achieve lasting solutions. While all countries must do their part to reduce emissions, we should not seek to impose on any countries’ measures or frameworks that thwart their efforts to meet the legitimate aspirations of their people for better and more prosperous lives.”

The push behind these remarks is that more climate-linked changes have become evident. The North Pole is still covered in ice, but – at the peak of melting in September – Flavin noted that “one need not go far to find open water. It could only be a few decades before the pole is ice-free in the summer.” Shipping lanes have already been changed to take advantage of the new open waters. Greenland’s nearby ice sheet also is melting, which could raise sea levels by up to 20 feet. That could destroy the seashore habitats of many species, including humans. Never before in the 200,000-year history of people on earth have carbon levels gone above 280 ppm, but now they are at 380. Scientists believe CO2 levels have to be held at 450 to 500 ppm to avert the worst affects of climate change. “The planet could be nearing a tipping point where big changes happen, such as tundra melting, releasing methane that will speed up climate change,” says Flavin.

The electric-power sector expects to attract the biggest cuts of CO2 under a carbon cap and trade system “simply because it’s the easiest industry to transform,” says Energy Information Administration Deputy Administrator Howard Gruenspecht. Transportation seems to be lower on the list. Panelists at the Gas Foundation conference said natural-gas-powered generation will likely grow with a mandated price on carbon, but it can’t be the only answer. “Relying exclusively on gas just isn’t economically feasible,” says Wood Mackenzie’s manager of North American Power Research, Anthony Damiano. “Electric power produces 40 percent of the nation’s GHG emissions, and coal generation is 80 percent of that, thus major cuts would have to come from that fossil fuel. To get back to 1990 emissions levels by 2025 with gas alone would require shutting down 40 percent of coal generation and replacing it with gas plants,” says Damiano. “That would boost the demand for gas by the power generation sector from 17 bcf/day to 35 bcf/day. Those examples were meant to be silly,” he adds, in an effort to show that a wide portfolio of technologies is needed.

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