EUROSOLAR's Call For The Decade Of Regeneration / Regenerative Earth Decade
After the international board of EUROSOLAR e.V. had passed the call for the Renewable Decade in February, it is now putting in a ten-point plan to ring in a renewable age. The tenor: 100 percent renewable energies are only the beginning of necessary climate stabilization
A new era in the history of humanity has now begun, with a new phase in the fossil-fuelled transformation of the Arctic. At the end of October the Russian-Swedish group of scientists on the research vessel R/V Akademik Keldysh reported unprecedented amounts of methane found rising in the Laptev Sea to depths of 350 meters along a 150-kilometer-long and 10-kilometer-wide strip of the continental slope 600 kilometers from the East Siberian coast. This is further evidence that the process may have begun to wake up some or all of the 1400 gigatons of carbon still bound in methane hydrates on the sea floor. This, combined with the permafrost melt means the rising risk of an abrupt climate change. This mechanism has long been known. Yet almost nothing has been done to stop it. Fossil energy consumption continues to rise, renewables are being slowed down.
Now it is time to unleash the Regenerative Age
This is a time for highest but constructive alarm. Aimless panic is not called for, but a completely unprecedented readiness for a rising risk of large and rapid changes, and concomitant immediate emergency measures to avoid the worst. For all those who still nurture hope of preserving life on earth, there is no alternative to end the burning of all fossil resources immediately - coal, natural gas and oil. In view of the unprecedented, clear and immediate threat, all central energy systems, including those based on nuclear resources, must be dismantled and replaced now, in a mobilization of all regenerative resources for a decentralized and fully renewable supply. Earlier but still dominant concepts, such as targets for - further emitting and polluting - 'climate neutrality' are inadequate and over periods of 20 to 30 years are far too long in view of the rapid climate dynamics. Temperature increase targets should be not 1.5 or 2 degrees but zero above preindustrial times. Not only have CO2 concentrations already risen to a 150% excess level, from 280 to over 415 ppm: methane concentrations are already three times higher than climate stability depended on over the past megayear, having risen from 600 to nearly 1900 ppb, much of it due to fossil fuel industries. Even less known than the large and rising atmospheric methane surplus is the loss of oxygen from the atmosphere and oceans due to fossil fuel combustion and heating, respectively, in a process known as deoxygenation.
Much more powerful methods are needed than those currently used in Germany, Europe and worldwide at cabinet and parliamentary levels: one that is tantamount to a general mobilization.
This includes the requirements and concepts of this 10-point plan:
1.
The introduction of a climate defense budget especially for
the rapid phase-out of fossil fuels and a switch to
renewable energies - this could require initially at least
five to ten percent of gross domestic products: in the case
of Germany this would be four to eight times the current
defense budget.
2. The introduction of climate emergency
diplomacy, that of ending armed conflict and acts of war, in
the common interest in the fight for survival - against the
common enemy of global warming. This includes a European and
worldwide climate migration management plan: billions of
fellow human beings will be forced to migrate very
soon.
3. The targeted restructuring of fossil industries:
through technical substitution programs, the elimination of
subsidies and, where necessary, structural measures such as
transformation assistance - as well as the immediate
dismantling of the massive regulatory blocking for renewable
grids, storage and distribution systems - supported by
EUROSOLAR’s New Energy Market Order.
4. The replacement
of jobs in the fossil industries by prioritized structural
reforms towards renewable industries.
5. The redefinition
of emission targets. Climate neutrality is not enough, but
even so-called zero emission targets relative to 1990 are
insufficient – the baseline year must be before the
industrial age. In addition to a 100% renewable energy base
the global economy needs sustainable strategies that are
capable of lowering greenhouse gas concentrations in the
atmosphere.
6. The classification of fossil resources as
toxic: their extraction and distribution should become
prohibited or at least highly taxed after a short transition
period.
7. The rapid development and regeneration of
healthy, climate-active agricultural soils, wetlands and
forests as the most effective carbon sinks.
8. The
transformation of the construction industry and all
industries and manufactories into carbon-sequestration
processes. This demands the concerted conversion of
atmospheric CO2 into wood, carbon fibers and other solid
carbon products.
9. Taking full advantage of
unprecedented productivity and innovation gains to massively
expand high-quality employment opportunities for all
citizens, existing and new migrants.
10. A new financing
mechanism is needed that rewards long-term investments such
as defossilization, agricultural reform and afforestation
with higher returns than short-term ones. This calls for
‘Future Banks’ that create special currencies with
negative interest rates, thus incentivizing spending tied to
sustainable products and services.
EUROSOLAR demands a focusing and tightening of the European Green Deal, away from mere climate neutrality to 100% renewable energies, carbon sequestering agriculture, reforestation with drought-resistant forests and the repurposing of the European Circular Economy guidelines into economy-wide carbon sequestration laws. The goal must be a climate-positive, emissions-negative Europe, based on a short-term 100% energy target realised by 2030, with practical, ever closer implementation horizons. For this there is no lack of available political tools, such as a bold new energy feed-in law, renewable energy technologies and many other successful examples: EUROSOLAR has been celebrating them for decades in its Solar Prize ceremonies and disseminating them in Solar City, Storage and many other conferences. The target of 2050 based on a 'net-zero' emissions calculation is too late, too little, and too much based on emissions trading as well as unsustainable and conventional technologies.