chris.harrington@fco.gov.uk .
UK emissions rose 3.1% as economy recovered in
2010
The 8.7% fall in carbon emissions as
industry activity slumped during recession was a blip,
figures show
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EU wants a 30% cut in carbon emissions, a
target agreed by UK, but Tory MEPs are opposing it.
Photograph: Jianan Yu/Reuters
The dramatic fall in the
UK's greenhouse gas emissions caused by the recession has proved to be a blip, with
national emissions rising 3.1% in 2010. The new energy and climate change secretary, Ed Davey,
attributed the rise, the first in almost a decade, to
increased home heating during a cold winter and shutdowns at
nuclear power stations after technical problems.
"One year
won't knock the UK off meeting its long-term emission
reduction targets, but it serves to underline the importance
of the coalition's policies for insulating homes to cut
bills and emissions and moving to greener alternative forms
of energy," said Davey, a Liberal Democrat who took over
from Chris Huhne, who resigned on Friday after being charged
over an alleged attempt to avoid prosecution for a speeding
offence.
On Sunday, a letter to the prime minister from over
100 Tory MPs was made public, which advocated cutting
subsidies to renewable energy, despite renewable energy's
role in reducing emissions. But environmental groups see the
rise in emissions last year as a warning and said the sharp
jump in home heating emissions showed the government had to
increase the ambition of its home insulation plans, dubbed the "green
deal". "This was meant to be the decade when we slashed
our emissions and sparked a green jobs bonanza, but instead
we're seeing progress stalling," said Louise Hutchins from
Greenpeace. "The fact that rise is partly down to the cold
snap in 2010 is no excuse, after all Sweden has colder
winters but their bills are lower because they have better
insulated homes. To copy their success the government's
flagship green deal will need more resources, and that
requires greater political ambition."
Keith Allott, head
of climate change at WWF-UK, said: "If the government ever
needed a wake-up call on greenhouse gas emissions here it
is.
"It is alarming to see emissions from homes rising
when people are struggling to pay their energy bills. The
UK's overreliance on gas has pushed up emissions along with
people's energy bills. It's a clear sign that the government
needs to back investors in renewable energy and get us off
the fossil fuel hook once and for all."
The UK's carbon
dioxide emissions, which are the tenth largest of any nation
in the world, have been falling over the past 20 years as
power stations used less coal and more gas to generate
power. The rise in 2010, of 18m tonnes of carbon dioxide,
follows a steep year-on-year fall of 8.7% in 2009 when the
financial crisis hit as economic activity.
The department
of energy and climate change statistic, published on Tuesday, showed 11.8m
tonnes of carbon dioxide came from the increased heating of
homes, mainly by gas. Problems with the country's biggest
reactor Sizewell B reactor in Suffolk, which meant it was
shut down for six months in 2010, led to more coal and gas
being burned. That added 5.6m tonnes to the UK's emissions
of climate-warming gases. Other sectors, including business,
agriculture and transport, remained all but
unchanged.
Despite the rise, the UK's emissions are about
23% lower than in 1990, the benchmark year for the nation's
international commitments to tackle global warming under the
Kyoto protocol, meaning the current Kyoto pledge has been
comfortably met. A legally binding domestic target of cutting emissions 35% by 2020,
compared with 1990 levels, also remains likely to be met.
However, since 1990 manufacturing taking place in the UK has
fallen sharply and goods imported from elsewhere have filled
the gap. When the emissions linked to those imported goods
are included, the UK's national carbon footprint has risen by
20%, though critics argue that the exporting country,
which benefits from the employment, rightfully is
responsible for these emissions.
The Nasa climate
scientist James Hansen has calculated that, in order to keep
the global temperature rise within the 2C limit accepted by
the world's nations, industrialised countries would have to
cut their emissions by 6% a year from 2013 onwards. Andrew
Simms of the New Economics Foundation said: "The market set
up to give incentives to cut carbon is not delivering in
anything like the speed or scale necessary. The UK's 3% rise
is so wrong, it takes the breath away."
Historically,
greenhouse gas emissions have move in lock-step with GDP, as
higher economic activity uses more energy, which generates
more emissions. The Stern review in 2006 of the economics of
climate change calculated that a 1% change in GDP brings a
0.9% change in emissions. However, the 2010 data for the UK
shows that the 3.1% in carbon emissions occurred with just 2.1%
of GDP growth.
Source: The Guardian
No Ice lost off
Himalayan Peaks in the past decade
Hopar glacier
in Pakistan. Melting ice outside the two largest caps -
Greenland and Antarctica - is much less then previously
estimated, the study has found. Photograph: Paula
Bronstein/Getty Images
The world's greatest snow-capped
peaks, which run in a chain from the Himalayas to Tian Shan
on the border of China and Kyrgyzstan, have lost no ice over
the last decade, new research shows.
The discovery has
stunned scientists, who had believed that around 50bn tonnes
of meltwater were being shed each year and not being
replaced by new snowfall.
The study is the first to survey
all the world's icecaps and glaciers and was made possible by the
use of satellite data. Overall, the contribution of melting
ice outside the two largest caps – Greenland and Antarctica – is much less then
previously estimated, with the lack of ice loss in the
Himalayas and the other high peaks of Asia responsible for
most of the discrepancy.
Bristol University glaciologist Prof
Jonathan Bamber, who was not part of the research team,
said: "The very unexpected result was the negligible mass
loss from high mountain Asia, which is not significantly
different from zero."
The melting of Himalayan glaciers
caused controversy in 2009 when a report from the UN's
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change mistakenly stated that
they would disappear by 2035, instead of 2350.
However, the scientist who led the new work is clear that
while greater uncertainty has been discovered in Asia's
highest mountains, the melting of ice caps and
glaciers around the world remains a serious concern.
"Our
results and those of everyone else show we are losing a huge
amount of water into the oceans every year," said Prof John Wahr of the University of Colorado.
"People should be just as worried about the melting of the
world's ice as they were before."
His team's study,
published in the journal Nature, concludes that between
443-629bn tonnes of meltwater overall are added to the
world's oceans each year. This is raising sea level by about 1.5mm a year, the
team reports, in addition to the 2mm a year caused by expansion of the warming ocean.
The
scientists are careful to point out that lower-altitude
glaciers in the Asian mountain ranges – sometimes dubbed
the "third pole" – are definitely melting. Satellite images and
reports confirm this. But over the study
period from 2003-10 enough ice was added to the peaks to
compensate.
The impact on predictions for future sea level rise is yet to be fully
studied but Bamber said: "The projections for sea level rise
by 2100 will not change by much, say 5cm or so, so we are
talking about a very small modification." Existing estimates
range from 30cm to 1m.
Wahr warned
that while crucial to a better understanding of ice melting,
the eight years of data is a relatively short time period
and that variable monsoons mean year-to-year changes in ice
mass of hundreds of billions of tonnes. "It is awfully
dangerous to take an eight-year record and predict even the
next eight years, let alone the next century," he
said.
The reason for the radical reappraisal of ice
melting in Asia is the different ways in which the current
and previous studies were conducted. Until now, estimates of
meltwater loss for all the world's 200,000 glaciers were
based on extrapolations of data from a few hundred monitored
on the ground. Those glaciers at lower altitudes are much
easier for scientists to get to and so were more frequently
included, but they were also more prone to melting.
The
bias was particularly strong in Asia, said Wahr: "There
extrapolation is really tough as only a handful of
lower-altitude glaciers are monitored and there are
thousands there very high up."
The new study used a pair
of satellites, called Grace, which measure tiny changes
in the Earth's gravitational pull. When ice is lost, the
gravitational pull weakens and is detected by the orbiting
spacecraft. "They fly at 500km, so they see everything,"
said Wahr, including the hard-to-reach, high-altitude
glaciers.
"I believe this data is the most reliable
estimate of global glacier mass balance that has been
produced to date," said Bamber. He noted that 1.4 billion
people depend on the rivers that flow from the Himalayas and
Tibetan plateau: "That is a compelling reason to try to
understand what is happening there better."
He added: "The
new data does not mean that concerns about climate change
are overblown in any way. It means there is a much larger
uncertainty in high mountain Asia than we thought. Taken
globally all the observations of the Earth's ice –
permafrost, Arctic sea ice, snow cover and glaciers – are
going in the same direction."
Grace launched in 2002 and
continues to monitor the planet, but it has passed its
expected mission span and its batteries are beginning to
weaken. A replacement mission has been approved by the US
and
Source: The Guardian
So long
Chris Huhne, and thanks for all the fights
Why
green businesses will miss the controversial former energy
and climate change secretary
You can say what you
like about Chris Huhne, and a lot of people have over the
past week, but he has certainly overseen an eventful 20
months for the Department of Energy and Climate Change
(DECC) and the UK's burgeoning green economy.
As this
weekend's countless (and possibly premature) political
obituaries have made plain, Huhne was not to everyone's
taste – there are plenty of people delighting in the resignation of a man who often
created the impression that he said what he liked, and liked
what he said. But despite a number of high-profile mis-steps
he was, for the most part, a good friend of green
businesses, and a powerful and vocal advocate for the
low-carbon economy.
Huhne's personal and political faults
have been well documented in recent days. He is an abrasive
politician, driven not so much by overly aggressive
instincts, but more by an unshakable self confidence in his
own judgement that his opponents routinely deride as
arrogance.
The stories of bruising exchanges with
colleagues and opponents are legion. There was the infamous
cabinet table row with Cameron and Osborne over dirty
tactics in the AV referendum, the attack on the
Conservative's 'Goebbels-like' campaign against the
alternative vote, and ill-tempered scraps with Nick Clegg
and Menzies Campbell for the Lib Dem leadership. There were
whispers of officials who were disgruntled over Huhne's
tendency to spend time engaged in political plotting, not to
mention a fair few egos bruised by a willingness to
challenge civil servants' advice. Then there were the attacks on both the "climate
sceptics and armchair engineers" opposed to the government's
green agenda, and the coalition of solar firms that
challenged his department's ill-starred handling of cuts to
incentives.
It is easy to understand why so few tears have
been shed over such a high-profile setback to a promising
political career.
And yet green businesses and green NGOs
have plenty of reasons to regret the resignation of the
energy and climate change secretary (to give him his full
title). I understand the problems caused by newspaper space
restrictions, but the media make a significant error when
they describe the post as energy secretary. Being energy
secretary would be a pretty easy job, being energy and
climate change secretary is a historic challenge.
Huhne
undoubtedly blotted his copy book with the chronic
mishandling of cuts to solar feed-in tariffs, and angered
old-school environmentalists with his support for nuclear
power and offshore oil drilling. But his willingness to
promote the green agenda, meet and engage with green
business leaders, and stand up to high-profile critics of
environmental policies, including his nemesis at Number 11,
means Huhne leaves the UK's burgeoning low-carbon economy in
better shape than it would otherwise have been.
Source:
Businessgreen
And Ed Davey replaces Huhne as
energy secretary
Liberal Democrat MP Ed Davey has been
confirmed as the new secretary of state for energy and
climate change, after Chris Huhne stepped down from the post
to fight criminal charges.
Deputy Prime Minister Nick
Clegg today announced that Davey would take up the cabinet role,
moving from his current position as minister for employment
relations, consumer and postal affairs in the Department for
Business Innovation and Skills (BIS).
Clegg said the MP
for Kingston and Surbiton would be the "right man for the
job", maintaining Davey had a "lifelong commitment to
environmental and green issues" and that he had shown a
formidable grasp of government policy".
He paid tribute to
Huhne's "groundbreaking policies" and left the door open for
him to return to "a key government position" if he avoids
prosecution.
Davey has in the past voted strongly for laws
designed to tackle climate change, including backing plans
to bring aviation and shipping into the Climate Change Act.
He also backed a law that would cap emissions from power
stations.
To read an excellent analysis of what Ed Davey
faces, go to this link : http://www.businessgreen.com/bg/james-blog/2144408/green-business-questions-ed-davey-answer
Source:
Businessgreen
Europe fights to save
cap-and-trade as crisis hits
Europe's main weapon
in the battle against climate change is now fighting for its
own survival.
In early January, investors in the
continent's cap-and-trade system still had to pay some €14
for the right to emit one ton of carbon dioxide into the
air. By the begging of January, the price of one emission
allowance had tumbled to a meagre €6.41 - making it much
cheaper to pollute and slashing the financial incentives for
companies to invest in low-carbon technologies.
Analysts
warn that the prospect of another recession in the
debt-ridden continent, and the accompanying decline in
emissions, could push prices below €2 by the end of next
month.
The troubles in the carbon market, a system being
watched closely from California to China, is linked to the
struggles of Europe' other ambitious project, the euro. And
just as financial investors have looked to the European
Central Bank to save the currency through massive
intervention in the bond markets, analysts say the emissions
market may need similar centralised help.
Last week, 19
companies, including oil giant Royal Dutch Shell PLC,
Philips Electronics NV and supermarket chain Tesco PLC, sent
a letter to the European Commission urging it to reduce the
number of emission allowances in the system and figure out
how to protect the market from future economic shocks. The
commission and national governments jointly manage the
cap-and-trade system.
"The lower price is really
undermining the development of technologies that will be
needed in the decades to come," said David Hone, Shell's
climate change adviser.
Shell, which is mostly known for
selling oil and gas, has been one of the pioneers of carbon
capture and storage, projects in which CO2 emissions are
stored underground so they don't get released into the
atmosphere and contribute to global warming. But investing
in new technologies like carbon capture and storage only
becomes commercially viable at a carbon price of between
€25 and €30, Hone said.
"Over the last few months, we
have seen some of these projects disappear," he added.
In
October, the UK government shut down the carbon capture
project in Longannet in eastern Scotland in which Shell was
one of the partners.
While the prospect of another
recession is the main reason for the recent drop in carbon
prices, experts say that - just like with the euro - serious
flaws in the system are exacerbating the problems and could
lead to its failure if they can't be fixed.
The economic
crisis has lowered emissions and thus hit the price of
carbon allowances. But the drop has been so dramatic because
there were too many allowances in the system to begin
with.
To get industry and sceptical government on board,
the Commission set a very high cap for emissions when it
launched the system in 2005.
Since then, most allowances
have been given out for free to the 11,000 power stations
and factories covered by the system based on their
historical emissions. Companies that emit less carbon
dioxide than they are allowed can sell their spare permits
to firms that exceed their limit. As of next year, airlines
will also be included in the system.
But the big test for
Europe's carbon market - and whether it can provide the
necessary incentives for cutting emissions - will come in
2013, when governments start selling a growing number of
allowances at auctions.
"Without intervention not only the
ETS is over, but Europe's climate policy is over. It will
put Europe back into the dark ages".
Apart from failing to
encourage the necessary cuts in emissions and technological
innovation, the collapse in the carbon price could also
worsen Europe's debt crisis.
Between 2013 and 2020, when
companies have to pay for more and more of their allowances,
the cap-and-tade system could raise as much as €190
billion for government across the EU if prices
recover.
"This is a pretty important revenue stream for
most member states," says Rob Elsworth, of Sandbag Climate
Campaign in London. "And they are watching revenues just
disappear."
Experts are hopeful that states will garner
the political will to save the carbon trading system, which
has pioneered the market-based approach to saving the
environment.
"If you take away this green-economy
narrative,what's really left of Europe?"
Source:
Reuters
Greenpeace praises Google,
slams Apple in latest green IT ranking
Google
has today taken top spot in Greenpeace's annual Cool IT Leaderboard ranking technology
firms' environmental efforts, seizing the crown from
networking giant Cisco.
The influential campaign group
said Google had climbed to the top of the table on the back
of its high profile investment in renewable energy projects
and its vocal support for US clean energy policy and EU
efforts to increase the ambition of its climate change
targets.
Further reading
• O2 cuts off new mobile phone chargers in
e-waste crackdown
• Davey hails energy efficiency potential in
first major speech
However, the group again turned its
fire on Apple, refusing to include the firm on the
leaderboard on the grounds that it does not meet the
ranking's criteria.
"[Apple] has not demonstrated
leadership or elected to pursue market opportunities to
drive IT energy solutions that many of its competitors have,
despite record profits and large cash reserves," the
campaign group said in a statement.
Facebook was also
excluded from the list, but Greenpeace confirmed it would be
included in next year's list after the social networking
giant announced late last year that following a high profile
campaign against the company's reliance on coal-fired power
it would adopt a new policy to source renewable energy
wherever possible.
Greenpeace International IT analyst
Gary Cook said that the ranking of 21 global technology
firms highlighted the crucial role IT firms can play in
cutting global greenhouse gas emissions.
"Technology
giants have a real opportunity to use their power and
influence to change how we produce and use energy - Google
tops the table because it's putting its money where its
mouth is by pumping investment into renewable energy", he
said in a statement.
"The IT sector might like to consider
itself forward-thinking, but it is keeping far too quiet
while the dirty energy industry continues to exert undue
influence on both the political process and financial
markets".
Google was followed in the table by Cisco, which
dropped from its previous top spot, and Ericsson and Fujitsu
in joint third place.
Dell was also praised for sourcing
over a fifth of its energy from renewable sources, while
Japanese telecommunications company Softbank was also
highlighted for the role it played in demanding a shift
towards renewable power following the Fukushima disaster.
Business software giant Oracle received the lowest
ranking of the firms listed, primarily due to its refusal to
disclose information on renewable or carbon intensive energy
use.
Cook urged more IT firms to use their status as
innovators to step up investment in greener technologies and
business models.
"The IT industry must use its influence,
innovative spirit and technological know-how to overcome the
dirty energy companies who are holding on to the status quo,
and holding us back from a transition to a renewable energy
economy", he said. "What we're seeing is a lot of talk from
companies about moving toward clean energy, but so far, not
much of action."
Source: Businessgreen
Merry waves of Windsor: Green Queen uses water
power to run her castle
Prince Philip insisted it
would never work.
But two giant turbines – based on a
2,000-year-old design by Greek mathematician and engineer
Archimedes of Syracuse – were lifted into the River Thames
to generate power for Windsor Castle.
Lowered into Romney
Weir by crane after months of preparation, the pair of
40-ton steel 'screws' will provide almost all the
electricity needs of the royal estate.
And although the
Queen and Duke of Edinburgh gave the green light to the
environmentally friendly hydroelectricity scheme, the man
behind the project yesterday revealed that Prince Philip had
been typically forthright in his scepticism.
David
Dechambeau, managing director of Southeast Power
Engineering, recalled an exchange with Philip.
He said:
'When I told him I was the one putting in the hydropower
system for Windsor Castle, he looked at me and said, 'No
you're not".
'So I said, "Yes I am" and he said, "No
you're not" and I realised this is an argument I can't win.
'So I said, "I don't understand" and he said, "No you
don't understand, people have been trying to do this for 20
years, you'll never get it done". I said, "I understand sir,
well I can tell you I will put that hydropower system in
this year no matter what. I'll promise you".
'That was a
little bit more than a year ago so I didn't quite make the
promise on time but I hear from the Royal Household that he
asks about the progress of this system often and he is truly
supportive and very interested in the technical
details.'
The support is perhaps even more surprising as
Prince Philip is known for his strong views on renewable
energy. Earlier this month he told the director of a wind
farm company that the turbines were 'useless' and would
never work.
Mr Dechambeau proposed the scheme to the
palace in 2006 and found courtiers supportive. He said water
power was more to the Duke's liking as it was 'quiet and not
really in anybody's view'.
The Archimedes screws have cost
£700,000 each to make and another £1million to install.
They will provide the palace's power needs – the
equivalent of 400 homes – for up to 90 per cent of the
time.
In Ancient Greece, pumps using the Archimedes design
were used to carry low-lying water to irrigate higher
areas.
The scheme to provide hydro-electric power to
Windsor Castle seemed to be dead in the water after Npower
Renewables announced it was pulling out of the
development.
However, Southeast Power Engineering Ltd
(Sepel) volunteered to fill the breach and continue the
project, which is situated just over 200 yards from the
castle's imposing walls on the River Thames near Eton.
The
Queen and Prince Philip have not yet visited the pioneering
hydro-electric scheme at Romney Weir that will be keeping
them warm in the New Year but the team behind the scheme are
hopeful they will see it for themselves.
'Prince Philip is
very interested in it all,' said Mr DeChambeau.
'I
understand from members of the Royal Household who I have
met and who have come down to the weir, that he often asks
about the progress.
'The amount of power the castle
actually needs can vary day to day. There is no fixed
amount.'
Mr DeChambeau explained that Sepel has entered
into a commercial agreement with Windsor Castle to provide
them with hydropower.
'The benefits of using water as an
energy source is that the cost remains stable, unlike the
price of gas and coal which fluctuates,' said Mr
DeChambeau.
'I know the Royal family were very interested
in providing a long-term power source at a stable
price.'
With the last of the two turbines now in place,
the project team needs to get them wired up and ready to
begin converting the energy from the fast-flowing
Thames.
The 4m-diameter turbines will be powered by
falling water from the weir.
It is estimated that they
will cut carbon dioxide emissions by 790,000 kilos per year
and be operational within just over a month.
The Deputy
Treasurer at the Royal Household, said: 'We are constantly
looking at new ways of saving and supplying energy so as to
remain environmentally friendly as possible well into the
future.'
'Accordingly, the household was very keen to
support this project.Once, completed, it is hoped that the
scheme will supply half of Windsor Castle's electricity.'
Source: Daily Mail
And don’t forget we have
a Facebook site where you can also catch up on the latest
Climate Change stories and more from the British High
Commission: http://www.facebook.com/ukinnewzealand
******ENDS
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